Music after the Internet has created a vast gray area. Inside it, rock bands can go electro, DJs can play acoustic guitars, rappers can make Yeezus and cyborgs and sing about being human. It’s not so black and white….
But then there’s George Morris, a talented singer/songwriter
with an ear for pop and a resume filled with rock, who has an EP coming out
that’s heavily electronic, sequenced beats and tricky techno-effects…and some
guitars too.
George shrugs at me with a shy, self-deprecating smile,
shaking his head at his own motives.
“I guess I called it…the
Black and White EP ‘cuz…the videos we just shot for some songs were…filmed
in black-and-white…”
He ends his sentence with an upward inflection, like he’s
questioning it out-loud or like he hasn’t figured it out yet. But at the same
time, he has figured it out. The EP’s done. It’s ready. Besides, George knows,
for the most part, what to put the most stress on, it’s not album titles so
much as it’s the songs, the melodies, the structures; it’s not his past
hang-ups over synths or distinctly “electro-sounding” music. The equipment,
whether it’s a fender or a moog, shouldn’t matter as much anymore.
The stress, or the
highlight, or really, what matters, in a George Morris song, is often his
singing voice: a pretty , wispy thing, pinched to a nasal tone symptomatic to
any rustbelt-dweller’s characteristic inflection but curled in its corners with
an affectation resonant with all the Brit-pop (60’s/90’s) he’s ingested in his
musical upbringing.
What happens next is the EP comes out…at some point. But
then what?
“Reshuffling…frequent…rapid…capricious…unpredictable…permanence…?”
Those are the words that come up most often as we discuss how much sense, if
any at all, can be made from the erratic ebbs and flows and overall erratic logistics
of the modern music industry and its galaxy of scenes, its littered nebula of
niches…Fuck it!
The world of bands has changed quite a bit since George Morris
was flown out to the west coast ten eight years ago with his high school band,
The Satin Peaches, to sign a big record contract with a big record label. Ho,
those days are long gone! Everyone’s on the field, now, all at once, but no one’s
carrying the ball. Is there a ball? The whistle’s smashed and the scoreboard’s
on the fritz. Where’s the goal line?
It’s that curious and frightening power: utterly enabled and
liberated to try whatever and whenever in-spite of the exhausted status-quo
forms of the past. That’s why this singer/songwriter, who’d spent nine of the
last ten years associated with a rock band – has gone electro.
George says he’d never considered himself a rock-song
writer, so to speak; the songs you’ll hear on the Black & White EP came from a writing approach he’s usually
followed in the past – just with different equipment. This isn’t like Thom
Yorke leaping from Radiohead’s psych-ish rock anthemics of Ok Computer into the knottier electronica of Atoms For Peace… It’s
not that weird or even ostentatious. No, these are pretty pure pop songs,
strung along by swingy melodies and those hazy vocals fluttering down instantaneously
sing-a-long-able phrases; the lyrics are lashed with post-apocalyptic affairs,
parodying post-internet nihilism- but charming with their simple poetry,
fitting nicely, somehow, to the organs chilly tones.
And that voice – it lilts along with a feathery quality, a
bit bleary at points as though this is a new voice for him that he’s only just
rousing to wakefulness, sporadically puncturing through with a throatier warble
– So this is Morris on a new morning. A more electronic morning.
Morris isn’t concerned with contracts anymore, so much as he’s
focused on how a band even operates in this zany internet world. Step 1 – get a
band: (Aaron Nelson on bass, Zach Pliska on drums and Helena Kirby on keys), so
that you can face the exciting and unpredictable stormy internet seas together, as a Chorus, a Gypsy Chorus.
Keep your ears peeled for the Black and White EP - The Gypsy Chorus hope to release it sometime in mid-Winter or shortly thereafter.
Next show: New Year's Eve
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