Time for an explanation:
Why all the DJSelf Jeff?
You ask.
Where to start, dear reader?
I respond.
First of all; the voice.
It is so pure, and sweet. A pop voice that would be at home in any year since 1972.
He (I'm not even sure what his name is. We'll call him Mark for the sake of this blog. He sounds like a Mark, doesn't he?) sounds like he must come from California. Or maybe the Midwest. I suppose he could be a cool kid from Manhattan, or maybe Florida. All-American Mark, he is the voice of his generation! I was told once, by Glycerin I think, that he actually comes from Chapel Hill, North Carolina. I don't hear any country in there. Maybe his dad teaches Statistics at Duke. That would explain the definite left brain leanings of his music.
Left Brain Leanings.
Think of Bach, Prince, Jon Brion...
That is how I think of Self. He has has a wealth of musical skill. He can play music in weird techno metal time signatures such as Lost My Senses. In this catchy ditty he rocks out in 11 beats per measure. If you want to try to count it out, just count out loud to 11, it's kinda fast, and make sure you say 10 and 11 when Mark says "I don't wanna". Normally this sort of beat would have 12 beats per measure. That would, however, make it more of what Chris would call "Sea Faring". In the wrong hands this 11 beats per measure song would sound like a kid who has listened to too many Yes records. But Mark is a pop songwriter who just happenes to have a extrordinary cranium with too many clever ideas, blowing the minds of bass players all over the land.
He is funny too!
Check out the end of Sucker from Breakfast With Girls
. He parodies the end of side one of Purple Rain. This is freaky supra talented muscian shit because Prince put that stuff down backwards. That means Mark (I just checked. His name is Matt) figured out what prince did, backwards (which is really forwards), then recorded his own tracks forward and then turned it backwards again. It amuses me to think that he is probably the only person in the history of the world to attempt so complicated a parody/tribute of this kind.
Mark loves the parody/tribute. He covers Let's Pretend We're Married and Alanis Morissette and The Doobie Brothers. And The Doobie Brothers cover is two-fold hilarious because it was recorded on toy instruments. All of Gizmodery was. This inside baseball fact fascinated me for the first 27 times I listened to the record. I was always trying to catch snippets of Speak 'N Spell and toy pianos. Eventually I realized that Mark greatest talent was his song writing. He has a prodigy's gift for music making but he has the even rarer gift of being a pop melodist.
You ask.
Where to start, dear reader?
I respond.
First of all; the voice.
It is so pure, and sweet. A pop voice that would be at home in any year since 1972.
He (I'm not even sure what his name is. We'll call him Mark for the sake of this blog. He sounds like a Mark, doesn't he?) sounds like he must come from California. Or maybe the Midwest. I suppose he could be a cool kid from Manhattan, or maybe Florida. All-American Mark, he is the voice of his generation! I was told once, by Glycerin I think, that he actually comes from Chapel Hill, North Carolina. I don't hear any country in there. Maybe his dad teaches Statistics at Duke. That would explain the definite left brain leanings of his music.
Left Brain Leanings.
Think of Bach, Prince, Jon Brion...
That is how I think of Self. He has has a wealth of musical skill. He can play music in weird techno metal time signatures such as Lost My Senses. In this catchy ditty he rocks out in 11 beats per measure. If you want to try to count it out, just count out loud to 11, it's kinda fast, and make sure you say 10 and 11 when Mark says "I don't wanna". Normally this sort of beat would have 12 beats per measure. That would, however, make it more of what Chris would call "Sea Faring". In the wrong hands this 11 beats per measure song would sound like a kid who has listened to too many Yes records. But Mark is a pop songwriter who just happenes to have a extrordinary cranium with too many clever ideas, blowing the minds of bass players all over the land.
He is funny too!
Check out the end of Sucker from Breakfast With Girls
. He parodies the end of side one of Purple Rain. This is freaky supra talented muscian shit because Prince put that stuff down backwards. That means Mark (I just checked. His name is Matt) figured out what prince did, backwards (which is really forwards), then recorded his own tracks forward and then turned it backwards again. It amuses me to think that he is probably the only person in the history of the world to attempt so complicated a parody/tribute of this kind.
Mark loves the parody/tribute. He covers Let's Pretend We're Married and Alanis Morissette and The Doobie Brothers. And The Doobie Brothers cover is two-fold hilarious because it was recorded on toy instruments. All of Gizmodery was. This inside baseball fact fascinated me for the first 27 times I listened to the record. I was always trying to catch snippets of Speak 'N Spell and toy pianos. Eventually I realized that Mark greatest talent was his song writing. He has a prodigy's gift for music making but he has the even rarer gift of being a pop melodist.