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August 31st, 2009

Mi & L'au debut new video for "Bingo"

You may remember in the months past we debuted a couple of short, home-made videos made by Mi & L’au to introduce some of the new songs from their album Good Morning Jokers, out now on Borne Records. If you haven’t given this album a listen, I highly suggest you do. It takes the sound of their debut to a whole new level: fleshed out, rich, and expansive, without sacrificing the space and patience that first enamored me. This new video, made by Mathieu Linote, takes you on a journey ona skull-faced horse leading through surreal ‘scapes. Digging the horns right now.

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June 4th, 2009

Leaves of Life + Bonus Rant

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Define ‘folk’ as you will. The term, with its divergent meanings and connotations and applications, has lost its ability to capture a contemporary “genre” in the strictest sense of the word. But as an essence, a philosophy, an outlook, it is still vital. It is still alive when musicians (or anybody, for that matter) share their songs or their stories or themselves with one another. Folk is about sublimating the human condition into art, plain and simple. And though the traveling bards may be working at Guitar Center and the hootenannies relegated to places that serve $6 Pabst, the urge to share, to trade, and to express keeps the folk tradition alive. Compilations are, perhaps, the closest thing the digital realm has to embodying the folk ethos. The artists join hands, so to speak, and share one, maybe two songs apiece. It’s like being around a campfire or in Washington Square Park, minus the whole live human thing. Any reader of this blog knows that compilations have been vital in the transmission of contemporary folk and psych music and, to me, it makes perfect, natural sense. Folk was never about headliners, it was about equal billing.

Curated by Buck Curran of Arborea, Leaves of Life will be released June 23rd on Borne Recordings. All proceeds benefit the UN’s Food Aid Agency, World Food Programme, and human rights advocacy monitors, Not On Our Watch. There will also be a digital version of the album with Bonus Tracks by Jozef Van Wissem, Plains, Denise Dill, and Laurent Brondel, so be sure to pick up a copy and hear some great songs.

[ First Listen ] Silver Summit – “Oaks”

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Leaves of Life Track List
1. Alela Diane with Mariee Sioux, “The Cuckoo”
2. Rio en Medio and Israel Cilio, “Mary”
3. Fern Knight, “Our Mountain the Mother”
4. Marissa Nadler and Black Hole Infinity, “Dead Wives Club”
5. Devendra Banhart, “Hotel St. Sebastian (demo)”
6. Arborea, “Son of the Moon, Daughter of the Sun”
7. Micah Blue Smaldone, “The Clearing”
8. Larkin Grimm, “The Butcher”
9. Mi and Lau, “The Funeral, The Pray”
10. Mica Jones, “Best Life”
11. Starless and Bible Black, “All the Finest Beams”
12. Cursillistas, “Mothers Taught”
13. Silver Summit, “Oaks”
14. Big Blood, “Sick With Information”
15. Eric Carbonara, “Sundown at Parakeet Park”
16. David Garland, “Splinter Heart”
17. Magic Leaves, “Lasso Reason”
18. Citay, “Little Kingdom”
19. Ora Cogan featuring Anni Rossi, “My Belle”

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June 2nd, 2009

Naturalismo Exclusive: Mi & L'au Debut "Dance on My Skin"

I’m happy to present the last in our series of new videos by Mi & L’au. Their forthcoming album of new material, Good Morning Jokers, is out now in Spain and Italy; the international release date is set for September 1. Many thanks to Mi & L’au for coming to naturalismo with their new work — I hope you’ve been enjoying it as much as I have!

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May 15th, 2009

Naturalismo Exclusive: Mi & L'au Premiere "Bingo"

MiAndLau_may_portretIt’s Friday so I know there’s already plenty of reasons to celebrate — but, hey, there’s never too much of a good thing right? In keeping with the celebratory spirit here at Naturalismo, here’s the premiere of Mi & L’au’s new song “Bingo” off of the upcoming Good Morning Jokers, out soon on Borne Records.

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April 29th, 2009

[ Naturalismo Exclusive ] Mi & L'au Premiere "Up in the Building"

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I’m proud to present the second world premiere from Mi & L’au’s upcoming record Good Morning Jokers, a song called “Up in the Building.”

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April 21st, 2009

[ Naturalismo Exclusive ] Mi & L'au Announce New Album, Release Videos

milau-goodmorning-cover-tranche1Mi & L’au is music for when space seems more apt than sadness. When silence matters more. Beneath our tongues and our clothes and our words, we don’t really know how to speak, or act, or think; we’re never quite sure how to feel because feeling is tied to identity and identity is tied to emotion and emotion isn’t absolute. It’s nuanced. But Mi & L’au captures the gradient nicely. Their music is a plane we all drift through, it’s a place we don’t quite understand, it’s a language we all know but seldom speak. It’s not easy to live there, but it’s refreshing to experience.

I’m proud to present one of four new “music videos” from Mi & L’au’s upcoming record Good Morning Jokers — set to be released at the end of May on Spain’s Borne Recordings. I’ll debut the other videos in the weeks to come but, until then, enjoy “Clown.”

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April 25th, 2008

The Presti-Lagoya Duo

L’au of Mi & L’au recommended the Presti-Lagoya Duo to me recently.  I had never heard of them before…but after watching this video (very poor, choppy quality I know) I was dumbfounded.

“Alexandre Lagoya (1929-1999) and Ida Presti (1924-1967) formed the greatest classical guitar duet in the world; this was not simply due to their technical excellence, but their subtlety and force in emotional expression. They also transcribed music for the instrument from many sources, most notably the harpsichord, violin and piano.

In these tawdry times where great emphasis is given by the media to celebration of the purely physical side of humanity—sport, models, etc.—questions of the mind and heart are often given short shrift. At a time when intimacy between adults is most often identified with the sexual act, it is refreshing and invigorating to hear proof of the narrowness of this view and the possibilities that exist.

If you listen to any of Lagoya-Presti’s playing—not just hearing, but actively engaging with the music—you will hear conversations of such intimacy that one at first feels embarrassed at being privy to them. It is hard at times to believe that two people could communicate so intricately. Given that both are playing classical guitars makes it all the more extraordinary.” LINK

April 1st, 2008

Mi & L'au: EXCLUSIVE Video

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First, I’d like to thank Mi & L’au again for such an amazingly poetic and thoughtful interview last week.

To add deliciously gooey icing on the already rich, buttery cake, a lovely pair of filmmakers from the midwest – Robin and Phil – shot a documentary called “Mi & L’au in the Middle Lands” which chronicles the band’s experiences touring in the breadbasket. Keep your nose close on the sweet scent of naturalismo, I’ll post updates about the film’s DVD release when the time comes. From Robin:

“Phil, an old hipster with a good eye for camera, and Robin , a young hipster with a passion for story, met at a film festival and quickly knew that, though we could not agree on the value of several films we’d seen, we wanted to work together. We recently finished a film about Mi and L’au’s trip to Kansas City called “Mi and L’au in the Middle Lands.” Our short film includes performances at the Pistol Social Club in the West Bottoms of Kansas City, Missouri, the Jackpot Saloon in Lawrence, Kansas, and in, and around, the abandoned farms and ghost towns in Northwest Missouri. The story of thisfilmmaking experience, and the story of the developing friendship between us and Mi and L’au is both something, unique and universal. Sometimes events and relationships just fall into place and, much to our amazement, something magic transpires. Such was the case with us.”

 

Here’s “Up the Buildings,” an unreleased song…

 

March 26th, 2008

Mi & L'au: The Naturalismo Interview

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Mi & L’au released their debut self-titled album two years ago on Michael Gira’s Young God Records. Their music is profound in its simplicity, powerful in its use of silence – not as omission, but as conscious addition. With the barest of instrumentation, the songs are sculpted from the silent gossamer of human intimacy and the infinite emotional forms it can assume. I’m proud to present an interview with L’au here on naturalismo. Enjoy, and stay close – we’ll be DEBUTING an exclusive track from their upcoming record as well as exclusive performance footage from their last United States tour. For now, take a moment to listen to I’ve Been Watching You from 2006′s Mi & L’au.
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Naturalismo: The story behind the creation of your debut album is fairly well documented – that you met in Paris and then moved to a cabin in Finland to record the album. Did you move to the cabin with the idea of crafting songs in mind, a means to be inspired? Or did you move there to escape the city, and the songs were the byproduct?
L’au: Well documented i don’t know. It’s just a short cut. Like taking a plane. From A to B, except than life is not at all a straight line.We never escaped or left the city. We took a break, a long long break. When people say that we lived ” in the middle of nowhere “it makes us laugh. Why would you be more in the center of the whole thing, just because you live in a big city ? Anyway, we had it all in Paris, but we were ready for new experiences. Mira and I get easily bored and so we never thought that we would stay by the lake forever. You can’t play with the bears eternally, and the trees never taught us anything. In fact, being there, on our own, was a way to digest what happened before us. I call that luxury. Screaming at your ghosts. Your body like a hygrometer. Billions of cigars in the box. Storms of lights. Nothing was calculated. It was like a recompense, something you really don’t deserve, you know, like glory. We were the king and the queen of our own emptiness. Silly kingdom. But most of the times, beautifully silent too. I mean, we had to get out of here, because we would have gone mad. But to answer your question, yes, the songs are a byproduct, a never ended discussion between a man and a woman.

N: You’ve cited classical music and blues as two major musical influences. What is it about those two forms that you find so appealing, and how do you translate those influences into your own compositions?
L’au: Classical music is the root of European music. And European that’s what we are. when you say ” classical music ” it’s very large, like saying ” Cinema “. ADAGIO was the main influence. We had this idea to add words to this shape, to transform adagio style into songs. A WORD IN YOUR BELLY is one example. We have quite a lot of songs like this one, most of them sung by mira in Swedish. It reminds us of Latin and immediately gives a sneaky feeling.Blues is not an influence. Son House is in our hearts, that’s for sure. His way of playing the guitar and singing are beyond many discoveries. Long live Son House ! long live the blues ! But when you listen to Mississippi john hurt, Elizabeth Cotten, or Joseph Spence, I’m not certain that these guys are playing the blues. It’s closer to Valse and Charleston, and that’s what got us interested in their music. Also, the way American musicians play acoustic guitar is circular. This grove, this rythm that they’ve got, we don’t have it. We are more into something i don’t even know what it is. But we tried to incorporate that aspect. They got the crossroad, we got the lake, which is the same thing after all .
N: I agree that Mississippi John Hurt is not blues at all – his music is far too joyous, almost transcendently tranquil. I sense an American folk influence on “I’ve Been Watching You” quite a bit, that song always sends shivers down my spine.
L’au: I don’t know where this song came from, i just woke up one morning, plugged the microphone, and that was it … i had Nick Drake in my mind i have to admit … the story goes like this … we just came back from this long break by the lake, it was one of our first days back in town … when we were by the lake, we didn’t have music to listen to … and Nick drake songs came back to me very clearly, and that’s probably why i grabbed my guitar and played fifteen hours a day and composed so many songs … so when we came back in town, that morning, i had to thank him in some musical way for his divine support. But i agree, my way of playing the guitar comes from Mississippi John Hurt as well … those two are like the same, but one is European and the other American … i like that! Nowadays, i think that Django Reinhardt came into my blood too.
N: When did you first start playing music? Are there any guitarists or composers that you would say most influenced your style?
L’au: When i was born i killed many baby chickens. The yellow ones. My mother was horrified. Her screams were the notes of my first composition. It was also my first trial. When i explained to the judge that some people are actually using music as a way to hide tortures and crimes. He advised me to become a banker, which i refused, you know me. These guys influenced me a lot more than guitarists and composers… I had a recurrent dream when i was a kid. People were in the desert, scared to death, thirsty. I was far away, in front of the sun. With one hand i took a bone inside my body, with the other hand i made a drum out of my flesh, and i bit it so hard that the ground began to move. People had no other choice but to dance. My mind flew around until i reached a box through which i came by the smallest door i’ve ever seen. It was dark. You couldn’t see a thing. Time to feel. It was not an empty space. It was full of silent people, waiting for something to happen. I walked through it and jumped into this thick air. When the lights went on, I wasn’t there anymore. I was gone… By he way, do you know the meaning of style ? In french, at least, it comes from STYLET … a thin long knife that was made to stab people in the back.

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N: Neither of you are native English speakers. Was there any reason for wanting to record your album in English, and does writing songs in a foreign tongue make it difficult to express your thoughts or emotion as vividly as if it were in your native tongue?

L’au: We compose songs in French, Swedish, Finnish, and English. We signed with an American Label, that’s why we sang in English on the first album. It could have been funny to send a french demo to Michael Gira, but i’m not sure it would have been effective ! We also sent music in France and Finland but America shot first …
I agree, it would have been easier to scream or clap our hands. But we do like our Babylon … ( Don’t miss the exhibition at Le Louvre, there’s a fantastic statue of Pazuzu )

N: I recently asked this question to Greg Weeks of Espers in regards to his (The Valerie Project) score for a Czech film. I have heard before that you spent a time in your life writing soundtracks for films. I know, for me, a visual component to music is often very helpful in understanding the “tone,” “mood,” or “setting” that the musician intended for his or her music. To what degree do you feel a musician’s “image” – both the manner in which they carry themselves and the simulacra which they use to brand themselves – alter the listener’s perception of the music itself?

L’au: Depends on if the images are dressed with potatoe bags or straight black tie …

N: Is the act of creating music – such an intense, personal endeavor – made more difficult when it is done with the person who most inspired it?

L’au: It would be even more difficult to do it alongside someone you despise, don’t you think ? Only a master and a slave could do that, but that’s a different subject …
let’s come back to intimacy …

N: Devendra Banhart’s song “Gentle Soul” was written about you during the time he spent with you in Paris. In that song, he says “Your voice has a calming strain / All whispering / My voice wants to do the same.” It seems you shared more than just physical space, but mutual inspiration as well. What was it like living and working alongside him during that time?

L’au: It was like walking on the moon, i guess … I wrote an answer to this song called THE BIRD. It will be on our next album. You see, that’s the point. It is a correspondence, but instead of writing letters, we make songs.

N: What contemporary artists have been inspiring you recently?- Mark Hollis – Harmony Korine – Chan-Wook Park – Paul Thomas Anderson – Arvö Part – Jim Jarmusch – Daniel Day Lewis – Martin scorsese – Chan Marshall – Cate blanchett – David Cronenberg – David Lynch – Gus Van sant – Louise Bourgeois – Annette messager – James Blackshaw – The babyshambles – Damien Hirst – Max Richter… etcN: Have you been working on any new material since the release of your self-titled debut album and, if so, do you believe your songwriting has changed since then?L’au: Yes sir ! we’ve been working touring working touring working touring all the way up, and all the way down. So everything had changed. Now, we’re old, we moan and we shiver !
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