281 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
281 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
(c) 1990, Derek Thomas
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THIS WORK MAY NOT BE REPRODUCED BY MEANS WITHOUT EXPRESS
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PERMISSION OF THE AUTHOR.
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[from the August 1990 issue of THROTTLE, P.O. Box 7122, Richmond
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VA 23220]
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Dial-A-Song works like this: dial 1-(718)-387-6962 and
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listen carefully. Sing along, if you like. Tape it, if you have
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the technology. This isn't just any Dial-A-Song service. This
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line goes directly into the Brooklyn home of They Might Be
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Giants.
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Neither John Flansburgh, the guitar half of They Might Be
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Giants, nor John Linnell, the accordion half, make money from
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their Dial-A-Song service. It's simply part of their crusade as
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Brooklyn's ambassadors of love.
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They Might Be Giants have been making quirky music with
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absurd, non sequitur lyrics since 1983. Their first album,
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sporting such gems as "Rabid Child" and "Nothing's Gonna Change
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My Clothes," received considerable college radio airplay in 1987.
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Their second album "Lincoln," leading off with the enigmatic "Ana
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Ng," landed them a spot on David Letterman. The boys signed with
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Elektra and released "Flood" this year, resulting in the unlikely
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hits "Birdhouse in Your Soul" and "Istanbul (Not
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Constantinople)."
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Throttle spoke with John Flansburgh on his cellular phone as
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the band headed south on I-95 to their show at the 930 Club, 31
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July.
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THROTTLE: John, are the songs you sing and the songs John sings
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the songs that each of you write?
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FLANSBURGH: Pretty much. We've collaborated on some things. We
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often both sing on songs.
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T: The songs you sing seem to be more issue-oriented, like "Your
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Racist Friend," whereas John's seem more nonsensical or
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absurdist, like "Particle Man."
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F: Well, those two examples certainly support your argument, but
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I think I've written some pretty nonsensical songs. John and I do
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have different styles. There are things we do better than the
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other. But I feel there's an overall style to the band that we're
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both working in.
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T: You seem to be more outspoken than John. Does he do many
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interviews? He seems sort of shy and delicate.
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F: I don't know. Hey, Linnell, are you shy and delicate? John
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just did the last two interviews. We split them up fifty-fifty.
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We're a democracy.
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T: There are a lot more songs on Dial-A-Song than are ever
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released. How do you decide what goes on your album?
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F: We put the good ones on. I think most of the good songs that
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appear on Dial-A-Song will eventually appear on records.
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T: Why do you fancy yourselves Brooklyn's ambassadors of love?
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F: When people think of Brooklyn, they don't really think of nice
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people. The slogan underscores the fact that we are from Brooklyn
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and are essentially nice people. And being an ambassador is like
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being the guy standing between the two parties shaking hands. The
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world needs more love, and we're here to present you with the
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love, direct from Brooklyn.
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T: You seem like such wholesome kids--is it really all an act?
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F: If it is an act, it's not very well planned out. We're not
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that wholesome. But compared to Axl Rose, we're probably
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downright conservative. We're private people. We present a lot of
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complicated stuff in our work, and we feel that's challenging
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enough to our audience. It's both not our personal style and not
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really important that we put on airs about who we are. When you
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say we're wholesome guys, well, we're just as embittered and
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angry as anybody. There are a lot of performers whose work and
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personas are very wrapped up together, and their songs are almost
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a form of autobiography. But I think our songs are a little more
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idea-oriented. I don't think other people could write the songs
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we write. When I look at people like Iggy Pop or Sid Vicious, I
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think of how much their persona went ahead of what they actually
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did. I don't know how important Sid Vicious's music really is,
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compared to Sid Vicious as a cultural figure. We're not into
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being heroic. We don't want to be somebody's hero.
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T: And yet somehow I think you are the hero of millions.
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F: A few thousand maybe.
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T: Can you release any songs you want or does your record company
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give you a hard time about what songs they want on the records?
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F: I guess we get to release whatever we want. No one's ever
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tried to stop us.
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T: There was a Dial-A-Song version of "Your Racist Friend" where
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you said "bullshit" but on the record you say "madness." Was that
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record company pressure?
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F: Oh, no, that was personal. I'm sure the record company would
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be more than happy if we swore on our records, stirred up a
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little controversy. "Bullshit" just sort of stuck out too much.
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There are a lot of things about the songs that get changed as
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they evolve. I think part of it is that when you're writing a
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song, you're trying to create something that is going to hold up
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to repeated listenings. So there are things that might have an
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immediate impact, that seem kind of cool, but over the long run
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they seem kind of bogus. Just the notion of saying the word
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"bullshit" over and over again seemed inarticulate.
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T: You've released two different versions of "Kiss Me, Son of
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God," one on the B-side to "Don't Let's Start," the other on
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"Lincoln."
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F: The single version is way we've always done it live. The one
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on the record was an experiment. Fritz Van Orden of the
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Ordinaires did the arrangement of the strings and brass. It
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doesn't sound exactly like what we do. It has that thirties
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proto-swing band sound to it. I like the way it came out. The
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hardest part for me was that the chords and the bridge got
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changed, so I had to change my harmony part which was already on
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the Andrew Sisters side of difficulty.
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T: Some of your songs sound big band-influenced, like "I'll Sink
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Manhattan."
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F: We have in the past few years listened to more pre-rock music.
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It's definitely a particular fascination of ours. We both listen
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to a lot of swing and vocal music from the fifties and forties
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and even the thirties. We listen to a lot of Ink Spots and early
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Mills Brothers. There's something very appealing about it. It's
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got a very live quality that you don't find in a lot of
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contemporary music. And it takes advantage of singing more, like
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singing in full voice, which I think is always kind of exciting.
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T: How old are you guys?
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F: I'm 30. John is 31. We're officially old by rock standards
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now.
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T: How long have you been playing together?
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F: Since 1983.
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T: And your album came out in...
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F: 1986.
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T: So what were you doing in those three years?
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F: We were basking in total obscurity. We were writing a lot of
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songs. We were doing a lot of shows in Manhattan, being a local
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band, paying our dues. It was a very fun time. In fact, 1985 was
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a tremendously exciting year because everything was very, very
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new. I have strong memories of doing our first interview and
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being completely nervous.
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T: How many songs have you guys written and demoed, like what we
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hear on Dial-A-Song, that have never made it onto record?
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F: Probably over a hundred. We've released about eighty songs on
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record. There's still a healthy number of unhealthy songs left.
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From this point on, most of the songs that are going to appear on
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our records will be new songs. We have had pretty much luck
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writing new songs. Our success rate is much higher now. And we've
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pretty much taken all the good songs from the back catalog and
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used them. Like "Letterbox" was a really old song, and for it to
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show up on the third album, you know, we're definitely doing some
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mining.
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T: So where's the Dial-A-Song machine?
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F: It's in my house. In fact, I just left it today, and for the
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first time ever, Dial-A-Song is going on vacation for two weeks.
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It's just going to play one song for two weeks because my
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landlady is out of town and I'm out of town and it's too hard to
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organize someone to come into the building and change it
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everyday. There's no brand new songs on it anyway. All the very
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best songs have all been eaten by the machine because they've
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been played a little too much. I just put one song on and the
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schedule of the tour and said, "Call back in two weeks." It's
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kind of depressing in a way. It's an all-time low for Dial-A-
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Song. We've been doing it for five years and we've been pretty
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conscientious about it. Unfortunately, this year of touring has
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kind of overwhelmed us.
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T: I know this is the third time you've been to Washington since
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January.
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F: I guess so. That's pretty fucking ridiculous. I mean, it's
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virtually the same show. It's kind of hard to think what we can
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do to spice it up. We'd better do something.
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T: At the show at Georgetown University in May, you seemed to be
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doing a lot more songs acoustically, without your backing tapes.
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F: I think that's been the trend over the past couple of years.
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We've moved more towards exploiting what we can do as a duo. I
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think we've realized that that can be a real show-stopping
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moment. A lot of times when people hear the drum machine and hear
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how complete it sounds, they don't realize how much of the sound
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is being generated by us. It's actually very lucky that John
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plays the accordion and I play the guitar because they can both
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function as rhythm instruments and lead instruments. So you can
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do a lot of arranging within a song with just those two
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instruments and still have a very full sound. If I was playing
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the pennywhistle and John was playing the recorder, I don't think
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it would be as full-bodied a sound.
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T: Where do you get the samples you use, like the conversation in
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"Snowball in Hell"?
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F: That's from a cassette that our sound man bought at a flea
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market for 25 cents. It's a How-to-Organize-Yourself, self-help
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cassette, and it's pretty odd. That whole thing is part of a "How
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to Get Your Shit Together" skit. It's a really silly tape. It
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really has no useful tips as to how to be more organized.
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T: You probably didn't need to get permission to use that did,
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did you?
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F: Well, we probably did need to get permission, but we didn't.
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We've been very bad about getting permission on sampled things. I
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hope we don't get sued.
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T: What does "Ana Ng" mean?
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F: Ng is a Vietnamese name. The song is about someone who's
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thinking about a person on the exact opposite side of the world.
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John looked at a globe and figured out that if Ana Ng is in
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Vietnam and the person is on the other side of the world, then it
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must be written by someone in Peru.
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T: What about the song "They Might Be Giants"?
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F: That again is a really, really old song. We actually recorded
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that in 1985, originally. We thought about doing it for the
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second album as well. Basically, we didn't want to put it on the
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first album because it seemed too weird. It just seemed perfect
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to have our theme song on our third album. It's a very
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complicated song, actually. When we did it originally, we
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recorded it on a four track and we just did millions and millions
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of overdubs and created this very tracked-out, complicated
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arrangement. And since we started working on an eight track, we
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tended to strip things down a little bit more. So when we came
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back to "They Might Be Giants," we found ourselves trying to
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recreate something we did pretty effortlessly on a four track,
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but when we were actually trying to use big, studio recording
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techniques, it became an incredibly complicated piece to put back
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together again. There's a ton of vocals on it, two guitars, two
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trumpets.
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T: It's a lovely piece of work.
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F: Well, thank you.
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X-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-X
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Another file downloaded from: The NIRVANAnet(tm) Seven
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& the Temple of the Screaming Electron Taipan Enigma 510/935-5845
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Burn This Flag Zardoz 408/363-9766
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realitycheck Poindexter Fortran 510/527-1662
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Lies Unlimited Mick Freen 801/278-2699
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The New Dork Sublime Biffnix 415/864-DORK
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The Shrine Rif Raf 206/794-6674
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Planet Mirth Simon Jester 510/786-6560
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"Raw Data for Raw Nerves"
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X-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-X
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