Archive for “Sleeper”

Ty Segall Says “Dinner Tastes Better When You Record A Song”

Posted in Music with tags , on August 26, 2013 by johnbuckley100

In a fun interview in the The New York Times, Ty Segall answers the question, “Why have you been so prolific?”

The answer is fun.  “That’s just what I do. Half-needing to do it as an exercise of the mind, and half an exercise of a daily routine. That’s my job. When I was younger, it was more like: ‘I don’t know how long I’m going to be doing it for. I need to do as much as I can, because who knows when my luck will run out?’ It was more like a race, but now it’s different. It’s an exercise, therapy, my daily vitamins, my daily dose, and it’s kind of necessary for my brain. Dinner tastes better when you record a song. Just like when you work a hard day at a job, you know? Dinner’s going to taste better. It’s like any other routine. It’s good for your brain and your body.”

Ty Segall’s “Sleeper” Is Fun, Inessential

Posted in Music with tags , on August 22, 2013 by johnbuckley100

Longtime readers of Tulip Frenzy know that we consider Ty Segall the most fun thing that’s happened to rock’n’roll since, like, the Pixies.  It doesn’t mean we have to love everything he does.  Sleeper is the only record Ty’s released this year, though we eagerly await the debut of Fuzz, his power trio that will soon go out on tour in support of their October 1 album release.  In days of yore, like when Dylan and the Beatles occupied a comparable position of importance to the broad space over which Segall so solidly dominates, there’d be listening parties in which acolytes would solemnly nod as the turntable spun that first play of some new record.  These days we download a record like Sleeper and listen to it without much worrying that it portends much meaning.  Yes, it is a (mostly) acoustic, often pretty album released by a tuneful punk rocker, but it’s not exactly like he’s gone off and joined a gorp-eating, tree-hugging cult or anything. It’s just a quiet record by a young man who writes songs easily.  And given the dexterity and self-cloning called for to produce an album like last year’s Twins, in which he played all the instruments, turning the machine on while he picks and sings a little must have seemed like a vacation.  This is not some weird detour, and it’s not hugely meaningful, though we acknowledge that it stems from a difficult time in his life when his (adopted) father died.  It’s an entertaining summer release that will keep us amused until Fuzz enters our brains and cores out what’s left of the cortex.