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FREE MP3s GUEST EDITOR

Mark Mallman’s “The Incredible Urban Myth Of The Invincible Criminal” Part 1

markmallmanbannerMark Mallman is a musician of great endurance (he’s performed 52-hour marathon shows consisting of a single song) and great eccentricity (he sometimes appears as his lupine alter ego, Mallwolf). Now, as a companion piece to his most recent album Invincible Criminal (out on Badman and featuring guest vocals from the Hold Steady’s Craig Finn), Mallman has emerged as a great storyteller with a graphic novel due early next year. Featuring Marvel comics-style artwork by Stephen Somers, The Incredible Urban Myth Of The Invincible Criminal is being presented on magnetmagazine.com as an audio book with daily installments throughout the week.

markmalmanpart1

“The Incredible Urban Myth Of The Invincible Criminal Part 1” (download):

Did you ever get the feeling you’ve been cheated? Well, at a slight age, I made an unwise decision to take up the piano. And with naive judgment, I stuck with the instrument as a way to meet girls. It worked. But every decision I made in life since that greener time of my youth was without resolution. My career path unfolded into pools of summer sweat, feverish nights of bleak isolation and monstrous hallucinations of talking centipedes in the night. Rock ‘n’ roll had brought me past the tipping point and into mental oblivion. Over time, this seemingly frivolous act of playing piano in bars would eventually downgrade my position in life from young, gifted, well-oiled suburbanite kid into the lower echelons of interstate road rash. My life’s work had culminated in a stalemate of big dreams and bounced checks—a cancelled television sitcom of dead days. With all this bitterness within me, I somehow conjured a villain of my own demise. The villain was monstrous. It was devilish. It had terrible taste in furniture.

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WRENS WATCH

Wrens Watch, Aug. 24, 2009

wrenswatchWe’ve been fans of New Jersey’s finest since even before their first album came out back in 1994, so let’s just say we’re used to sitting around waiting for them to take their sweet-ass time putting out new music. (Three albums in more than 14 years makes the Wrens about as prolific as Boston, which is kind of like being as tall as Yasser Arafat.) As reported in a Wrens Watch Special Report, January 9 marked a huge milestone for the guys: guitarists Charles Bissell and Greg Whelan, bassist Kevin Whelan and drummer Jerry MacDonald. They issued “Pulled Fences,” their first new (well, sort of new) song since 2003’s The Meadowlands. Perhaps motivated by finally releasing something, the band convened—not in a real studio, but in Kevin’s basement—31 weeks ago to begin work on its new album. And not only that, the Wrens recorded an actual song (which you can download for free here). When we checked in with Bissell 28 weeks ago, he took exception with our good-natured sarcasm and quickly ended the interview. After ignoring us for a while, Bissell finally gave us a progress report; it seems that while other bands get together and record, the Wrens stay apart and talk to each other on the phone. Or they do nothing at all. Or they update their Facebook pagesTwenty-three weeks ago, Bissell informed us he was “too busy” to respond to our questions, but he did promise us some exclusive Wrens mp3s in the near future. Twenty-two weeks ago, he didn’t even bother responding to our emails, prompting us to call him an unprolific Ryan Adams. That got Bissell’s attention, who 21 weeks ago apologized (profanely) and promised us an exclusive Wrens mp3 for the April 6 Wrens Watch. After not delivering, he said he’d come through the next week, but he didn’t. When Bissell ignored us again (Wrens Watch, April 20 and April 27), we speculated the Wrens were actually recording. Or maybe Bissell was just being a jerk. But then he told us 16 weeks ago he’d have a new Wrens mp3 for us. And guess what? The man finally came through. Download a demo of “Z,” which was written and performed by Kevin. We emailed Bissell numerous times to thank him for “Z” and ask him how the new record is progressing, but like we told you 14 weeks ago, he was unresponsive. He did email us a photo for 13 weeks ago, though, so we had that going for us. Which was nice. Twelve weeks ago, we got an email from Bissell saying, “Headed to bed but might have something for you.” As reported 11 and 10 weeks ago, other than a strange email from him referencing Fat Albert, we hadn’t heard from him since. Nine weeks ago, we told you that Bissell, apparently on vacation, said he would have a new song for us “as soon as I get home on Saturday,” but he never came through. Bissell returned our emails eight weeks ago, but he didn’t send any new Wrens music. He did, however, send a truly tasteless Michael Jackson joke, and since it was actually funny enough for us to tell it to others, we gave Bissell a pass. Seven weeks ago, Bissell—on vacation yet again—emailed to say, “Maybe I can actually send a song to you after I get home Sunday.” Then guess what? He emailed us his first new Wrens demo, and like we told you six weeks ago, it’s a really good song. Five weeks ago, Bissell emailed us to say he recorded another new demo, but he’s keeping that one for himself. He also said, “Smellmineitsucks,” whatever that means. Though we emailed Bissell repeatedly four weeks ago, we didn’t even get so much as a “Smellmineitsucks.” Three weeks ago, Bissell sent this missive: “We gonna see ballgame this summer? And I don’t mean a view of you working your pockets on a street corner.” (We think Bissell just might have a shot at a cameo in the next Judd Apatow movie, Unfunny People.) Anyway, Bissell was supposed to respond to us with his thoughts on the recent 20th anniversary of the first live show by the band that eventually came to be known as the Wrens (those guys must be old), but he didn’t. Two weeks ago, we did get an email saying he didn’t have enough free time to “justify replying to explanatory spam from MAGNET,” so maybe Bissell is a (mildly) funny person after all. This week—like last week—we got nothing.

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VIDEOS

Film At 11: The Dream Syndicate

Thanks so much to our old pal Steve Wynn for guest editing the MAGNET website this week. As expected, he did a great job. Be sure to check out his upcoming tour with wife/drummer Linda Pitmon, Peter Buck (R.E.M.) and Scott McCaughey (Minus 5). In the meantime, here’s a live video of the Dream Syndicate’s epic “The Days Of Wine And Roses” from 25 years ago.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OUksKenf1F8

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GUEST EDITOR

From The Desk Of Steve Wynn: “Amphetamine” In “Bandslam”

wynnlogo3Fifteen years after he scratched a lifelong itch and moved to New York City, Steve Wynn has settled in nicely to life on Manhattan’s Upper West Side. The relocation also breathed fire into a music career that already had notched landmark albums by his first band, the Dream Syndicate, collaborations with Gutterball and a slew of excellent early solo releases. Once he turned 40, Wynn rolled up his sleeves and really went to work, cranking out masterpieces like 2001’s Here Come The Miracles and 2003’s Static Transmission. Wynn, wife/drummer Linda Pitmon, Peter Buck (R.E.M.) and Scott McCaughey (Minus 5) are set to begin a U.S. tour. Read our Q&A with Wynn. (Also read our 2001 Q&A with Wynn, conducted by novelist George Pelecanos, as well as our overview of the Dream Syndicate and its fellow Paisley Underground bands.)

Steve Wynn: I like the way the Bandslam crew sings my song.

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FREE MP3s

MP3 At 3PM: Or, The Whale

ortcouch4278Ever wonder what would happen if San Francisco’s Or, The Whale decided to smoke some hallucinogenic jimson weed and then write a song about it? The second track from the group’s self-titled sophomore album (due September 22 on the Seany label), “Datura” has your answer. Titled for the Latin name of the weed datura stramonium, “Datura” is a gentle high with sweet country melodies and introspective vocals. Download “Datura” below, and visit Or, The Whale’s website to listen to more from its upcoming release.

“Datura” (download):