__Mon Oct 22nd__ Glossary, The Dead Records
__Mon Oct 22nd__ Glossary, The Dead Records
Monday October 22nd, 2012
Another F’n Promoter Presents:
Glossary
The Dead Records
10PM
$5
“We always consider playing live a whole different thing than a record. After you’ve played a song a bunch of times, dynamics and parts change. It keeps it interesting for us to have that freedom. I don’t feel like the record is more polished. It’s a very different record than the last one. We’re trying not to keep making the same album. The next one will be different from this one. I’m always writing, so there’ll be a new one next year.”
The October 2011 release is a bluesy, gospel-y alt-country opus sure to strike chords with the overlapping fan bases of Van Morrison and Spoon, and was crafted with the purpose of lifting spirits and inspiring some much-needed hope. Exhausted with widespread communal brooding over the state of the world, Glossary set out to revive some of rock ‘n’ roll’s once-prevalent optimism. The album is intended to convey a hopeful message as it pays homage to some of humanity’s more desirable qualities.
“Thematically, I feel what holds the album together is its stories of the great attributes of human beings,” says Kneiser. “I really wanted the songs to show the greatness in people — no cynicism or apathy. Musically, I feel it holds together too.
“We wanted to make a positive record because we felt like a lot of older rock ‘n’ roll we loved had some sort of uplifting sentiment — the idea that rock ‘n’ roll can save you, that it can pick you up and had some almost spiritual power. That has always been something we believe, and we want the audience to experience that too.”
In recent years the town of Murfreesboro has produced more than its fair share of indie-rock phenoms (e.g., How I Became the Bomb, Velcro Stars, De Novo Dahl, The Features, et al). Middle Tennessee State University’s revered music programs are the most likely source, but nearby cities like Nashville and Knoxville often appear to be the biggest beneficiaries of Murfreesboro’s talent due to the town’s lack of venues.
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8usFPIxirDs[/youtube]
“Murfreesboro is like any town, it goes through phases,” Kneiser explains. “There’ve been years when it seems like there’s a lot going on and years where it’s really dead. There’s never really been a proper venue in Murfreesboro. That’s always been a problem with maintaining a tight scene. It doesn’t make any sense. The town has so many musicians because of MTSU’s recording industry program; that’s why there are so many great bands.”