Tag Archive | "The Mumlers"

EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW: The Mumlers


The formation of The Mumlers in 2005 seemed to be an inevitable occurrence that began to develop organically decades earlier when the members were elementary and middle school-aged younglings in a quiet suburban neighborhood in San Jose. Flash-forward six years and The Mumlers of late-2011 are substantially different than The Mumlers of old. As their tour with Two Gallants came to a close, The Owl Mag caught up with The Mumlers in Davis to talk about life on the road, the new experience of having women in the band, and their general fascination with Insane Clown Posse enthusiasts.

The Owl Mag: There have been some recent changes in the band with new members coming on board for the last tour. How did you guys meet?

Rosie Steffy (keyboards, violin, drums, vocals): Will saw me juggling on the corner of Broadway and 14th in downtown Oakland and was so impressed by my throwing skills he knew I would be the perfect bandmate.
Matt Montgomery
(bass, vocals): I’m apprenticing Rosie because I’m a juggler too.
Will Sprott
(guitar, lead vocals): We’re actually all juggalos too.
Matt Montgomery: That’s right, we’re all juggalos and jugglettes.
Will Sprott: We met at an Insane Clown Posse concert.
Rosie Steffy: No, you recognized us from the Insane Clown Posse concert.
Will Sprott: That’s right, I didn’t actually meet you there. But when I saw her juggling I thought, “that’s that jugglette from the Insane…Clown…” no, just kidding. We just watched this short documentary about juggalos… you should watch it.
Eli Reitz (drums): Will and I met on Craigslist. No… we’re roommates. His drummer didn’t show up one day and he was like, “dude, get outta bed! Can you come play this show with me?’
Will Sprott: Colleen Johnson also plays keyboards, guitar, and drums. She toured with us on this last Two Gallants tour.

The Owl Mag: Speaking of Two Gallants, you just concluded a tour with them. Talk a little bit about what that experience was like.

Will Sprott: It was a ton of fun. Those guys, just personally, are really nice guys and they are super fun to travel with. They have fun crowds, the people who come out to see them are just really excited to be there so it was always nice everywhere we showed up because there was a lot of energy in every room we played in.
Rosie Steffy: Our matching band vans looked really good together also…
Will Sprott: Oh yeah, we had a good and evil thing going on with our black and white matching vans.

The Owl Mag: Were you guys playing in bigger venues or smaller venues on this particular outing?

Will Sprott: It was really a mixed bag. We would play really nice venues one night, then we would play in a hotel lobby in Rapid City, South Dakota, or on a levy next to the Mississippi River in New Orleans, or in a swanky hotel in Toronto.

The Owl Mag: Was there one stop on the tour that was particularly memorable? Or a stop where something crazy happened, like someone getting lost in the city?

Will Sprott: Atlanta was really fun. We played to this raucous crowd that was all ages, so there were a lot of young folks there. Oh! Then somebody got engaged during the Two Gallants set which was nuts because I’ve never witnessed that before. They got up on stage during the set and the guy proposed. What other crazy stuff happened?
Rosie Steffy: That same night I got lost [in Atlanta] and fell asleep on the ground – that was fun.
Will Sprott: That’s true, we lost Rosie and were looking all around the city for her and it turned out that she was just asleep in someone’s front yard.
Rosie Steffy: I was just trying to star gaze and got a little too dreamy (laughs).

The Owl Mag: The Mumlers played at Treasure Island Music Festival in 2010 and played SXSW last March. Do you have any plans in 2012 to play at any festivals or return to SXSW?

Will Sprott: We’re playing the End of Times Festival at Machu Picchu (laughs). I’m not super excited about going back to SXSW. I mean, I’d go just to go but it’s not all that fun to play, but it’s definitely fun to be there. At this point, we don’t really have any festival dates booked, but you never know what’s going to happen.

The Owl Mag: Because of the changes with new band members coming in, has it been difficult getting everyone on the same page or in the same groove prior to going out on the Two Gallants tour?

Will Sprott: Well, since everyone went under extensive plastic surgery, name changes, and that kind of thing, they all know the songs still, they just look way different. Everyone was over their old identity and just stopped playing their old instruments. We had a good amount of rehearsal time before going out on tour. We were out the whole month of September so we pretty much spent all of August playing together which gave us enough time to make it work.

The Owl Mag: What’s been the biggest difference between this new lineup as a foursome as opposed to the previous six person band?

Rosie Steffy: More space in the van?
Will Sprott: I played with those guys for years and years, so we obviously had a really easy rapport with each other. But at the same time, it’s been fun to play with other people and to have their input into the songs to see what happens. It has also been fun playing with women because they sound really… nice when they sing.

The Owl Mag: And I’m sure touring with a bunch of guys is much different than touring with two ladies in the band.

Rosie Steffy: 50/50!
Will Sprott: It was a good balance. You get sort of dude overload when you are in a van with six guys, which is what we did for a long time.
Rosie Steffy: The van actually started smelling really interesting during the tour, but it never smelled bad. Which is pretty impressive and possibly related to the gender ratio (laughs).

The Owl Mag: Some of the songs on your albums Thickets and Stitches and Don’t Throw Me Away are inspired by your experience growing up in San Jose. In particular, I’m thinking about “St. James St.” What is that song about?

Will Sprott: That specific song is about this guy named Dewberry who used to live in my neighborhood. When he would walk around, he was just the coolest looking guy I’d ever seen. He would wear these flowing silk shirts, always had his bare chest to the world, and would wear big furry hats. He just looked… good all the time. And he was always going to 7-11, so the song is really about him and me and our imaginary life together. I like when you can look at your literal surroundings and then all of a sudden they seem magical. That was what I was trying to do with some of those songs – just looking at my own neighborhood and seeing these deeper worlds within them and trying to make them into something good.

The Owl Mag: Prior to touring with Two Gallants, you played a solo show at Great American Music Hall. Are you performing new material at those shows or your own solo material?

Will Sprott: It’s a hodgepodge. I like letting the songs sort of live in different incarnations. I like playing them by myself and playing them with other people. There are certain songs that don’t really work so well with a band. A few I’ll play at those [solo] shows that I don’t play with The Mumlers. But other than that, they’re pretty much the same songs. I don’t really differentiate between songs I work on for The Mumlers and other songs, it’s just writing songs.

The Owl Mag: At the end of the month, The Mumlers are doing a Halloween tour and on the October 29th you’re playing at Brick and Mortar in San Francisco with He’s My Brother, She’s My Sister. Are you guys planning on dressing up for the show since it’s slated as a Halloween show?

Will Sprott: Yeah. We’re hoping to do the whole tour in costume. We’ve been having band meetings on what we’re going to dress up as so we’re working on it. The other day we were talking about maybe starfish, but we don’t know yet. It will be elaborate though, I can say that much.

Catch The Mumlers dressed up as starfish in San Francisco at Brick and Mortar on October 29th, in Santa Cruz at Moe’s Alley on October 30th, and in San Jose at Pagoda on Halloween night.

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The Best, Worst and Most WTF Moments of the 2010 Treasure Island Music Festival


The Treasure Island Music Festival has officially wrapped up its 3rd 4th year of music, dancing, activities, and food packed into two days. The event, put on by Noise Pop and Another Planet Entertainment, kicks off every year with a day of electronic dance/DJ/hip-hop music and closes with a day of indie rock. The lineup is a perfect blend of big ticket acts and rising stars, giving the event a large festival feel in a tiny package. With past headliners like the Flaming Lips and Justice, TIMF 3 4 had a lot to live up, to but this year’s powerhouse lineup definitely brought the fun and excitement we have come to expect.

After listening to all the bands, tasting all the food and dancing till our booties would shake no more, The Owl Mag is taking a look back at some of the highlights and handing out some TIMF honors.

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Best Warming Up of a Frozen Crowd – Belle and Sebastian

What is there to say about Belle and Sebastian? Their live shows are whimsical. No matter what your musical taste it’s impossible not to be won over by the band’s sweet sounds. Only a band as wonderful as Belle and Sebastian could warm up a frozen, rain-drenched crowd standing in the oceanside breeze at 9PM.

Deadmau5 @ Treasure Island Music Festival

Best In Show – Deadmau5

Deadmau5 rocked it, pounding the crowd with heavy beats, an overwhelming light show and his patented mouse helmet complete with LED lights.

LCD Soundsystem @ Treasure Island Music Festival

Most Disappointing Crowd Reaction to an Amazing Show – LCD Soundsystem

Maybe it was the cold or perhaps everyone was danced out, but LCD Soundsystem did not get the hero’s welcome they deserved. Granted, they did come out with one of their slowest jams, putting a damper on the over all performance–but they rocked the rest of the set, although you wouldn’t be able to tell from the almost motionless crowd.

Maus Haus @ Treasure Island Music Festival

Wallpaper @ Treasure Island Music Festival

Best Local Act – Maus Haus & Wallpaper

This was a tie between synth rock locals Maus Haus and disco glam duo Wallpaper. Yes, they were the only two local acts, but they are the only two hailing from the Bay Area that could hang with the likes of Deadmau5 and LCD Soundsystem. Both bands drew a large crowd considering they were the first two acts of a two-day festival.

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Most Adorable – She & Him

Okay, so Zooey Deschanel is adorable, but so is the rest of the band and their music. Not many people could pull off an oldies revival sound like that but Deschanel and M. Ward do just that. It’s nice to see them transition from novelty act to a legitimate band.

Die Antwoord @ Treasure Island Music Festival

Most Insane Fans – Die Antwoord

Die Antwoord is insane, so naturally, their fans are insane as well. The combination of screaming, writhing, tattered-clothes-wearing fans with gold-grill sporting, profanity-spewing, super ninja Die Antwoord, is a match made in some awesome alternate dimension.

!!! @ Treasure Island Music Festival

Most Enthusiastic – !!!

!!! lead singer Nic Offer is an animal on stage, dancing around like a kid who’s just realizing he loves music. It made the fans scream and boogie right along with the funky, disco, dance rockers.

Phantogram @ Treasure Island Music Festival

Most Likely to Succeed – Phantogram

There were some big names at the festival, but walking around listening to people chatter, the buzz was all about Phantogram. Festival goers really dug the once-duo now-trio’s brooding, electronic shoegazing. We will definitely be hearing more from them in the future.

Holy Fuck @ Treasure Island Music Festival

Most Out of Place – Holy Fuck

Holy Fuck is not a festival band. Their sound is amazing and mesmerising; they are aggressive and chaotic. It’s an incredible experience to see them live inside a venue, but the chaos is diluted when played in a big outdoor festival setting. If you weren’t standing right by the stage the noise emanating sounded awkward. Those who were not already fans were not beckoned to the stage but rather milled about seeing what else the festival had to offer.

Die Antwoord @ Treasure Island Music Festival

Best Advice – !!! and Die Antwoord

Nic Offer of !!!: “You should join a band, it’s a lot of fun.”
Die Antwoord: “Be happy.”

Miike Snow @ Treasure Island Music Festival

Little Dragon @ Treasure Island Music Festival

Best Battle of the Swedes – Little Dragon and Miike Snow

So apparently Sweden is filled with costume-wearing, shadow-lurking, space-age dance rockers. At least that’s what could be gathered from the last two acts to appear on the Treasure Island second stage. Little Dragon wooed the crowd with their spacey synth pop while lead singer Yukimi Nagano drew more people in with her dancing, swaying, jumping and siren voice. Miike Snow put on an equally trippy show filled with driving beats, hypnotic vocals and theatrics. The band entered the stage in darkness and smoke, all wearing expressionless masks. Their sound is a meticulous patchwork of sounds from electro synth to DJ beats to punk and disco.

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Most WTF? – Monotonix

Any band that says “fuck the stage, we are playing in the crowd” is going to have a memorable performance. Monotonix threw their gear into the crowd and used those who weren’t scared away as the stage. Literally, the lead singer sat on a drum stool that was held up by the audience. There’s no way to really describe their sound–it’s loud, frightening and awesome.

Four Tet @ Treasure Island Music Festival

Most Lackluster Stage Presence But With Killer Beats – Four Tet

Poking at a laptop doesn’t make for the best stage performance. Luckily Four Tet pumps out some killer music so stage presence can easily take a backseat.

Best Food – Unagi Burrito
BBQ Kalbi serves up a killer unagi burrito.

Best Sponsored Promotion – Vitaminwater’s Silent Disco

In a move of sheer genius, Vitaminwater set up a Silent Disco, a designated area tucked in a corner of Treasure Island where people were dancing in silence, or at least that’s what it seemed from the outside. In reality people were wearing wireless headphones listing to fantastic DJs spinning dancy remixes and beats.

Best Unlisted Performance – The Ferocious Few

The Ferocious Few set up an impromptu stage in a small corner of the festival and played a killer set sans stage, as their fans have grown accustomed to.

Most Appropriate Band Theme – The Mumlers

San Francisco’s The Mumlers took the stage with a pirate theme, perfectly matching the overall pirate theme of the festival. They even play a brand of rock that is dark yet danceable, something a pirate could definitely jig to.

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Most Energy – Superchuck

You would never guess that the members of Superchunk are in their 40s. Especially not after watching them jump and run around the stage at Treasure Island. They had more energy than any of their younger festival partners.

Faces of TI

Newest Fashion Trend – Animal Hats

These aren’t the furry hats with ears that everyone is used to seeing. These are hats with animals on them. Maybe it’s a shark or a lion or a chicken but now there’s no more looking like an animal, people are just straight up wearing animals.

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Best Recovery – Broken Social Scene

Broken Social Scene came out on stage looking like they hadn’t slept in months and that’s because they hadn’t. They were at the end of their tour, looking tired, getting frustrated, and at one point a malfuntioning guitar was thrown to the ground. After some hearty crowd love the band powered through and got a second wind closing out the show with Drew jumping into the crowd because, as he put it, “I’m going to crowd surf now because I want to be close to you.”

Best Classic Indie Rock – The Sea and Cake

The Sea and Cake have been around for some time, before the indie explosion of the 21st century. They have played consistently pleasant, soulful understated indie rock since the mid-’90s and that’s exactly what they brought to Treasure Island.

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Most Exciting Newcomers – Surfer Blood

With a single album under their belt, Surfer Blood is burning up the indie rock scene and gaining some serious notoriety. They play fuzzed-out, island-inspired grunge pop. They put on a raucous set that drew in many old and new fans.

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The Worst – RAIN

How did San Francisco go from 90 degrees to rain in a week? More importantly why did it happen during Treasure Island? The festival definitely seized a bad opportunity and made it worse by not allowing umbrellas and then selling shitty plastic ponchos for $5 each. Unfortunately it was worth the inflated prices as the rain didn’t let up until later in the afternoon.

San Francisco is rapidly becoming a popular festival destination for music fans around the world. With Outside Lands, Noise Pop, Treasure Island, Stern Grove, Hardly Strictly and most recently, the All Shook Down Festival, it’s a wonder why the city by the bay isn’t more recognized for its festivals. Let’s keep it that way! Any more ravenous, dancing, music loving fans on Treasure Island might sink the damn thing.

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Time to Stretch Those Hammies for the 2010 Treasure Island Music Festival


We see this in your future.

You need to be in tip top shape for this weekend’s Treasure Island Music Festival. And with the Giants making the playoffs (FUCK YEAH!) the bus situation over to creepy island (it’s so weird over there) is set to be an epic battle of patience and bladders. These tunes should put you in the right frame of mind.

Saturday, Oct. 16:

LCD Soundsystem

Deadmau5

Kruder & Dorfmeister (Live)

Miike Snow

!!! (Chk Chk Chk)

Die Antwoord  

Little Dragon

Four Tet

Holy F—

Jamaica

Wallpaper

Maus Haus

Sunday, Oct. 17:

Belle & Sebastian – “Come Monday Night”

The National – “Bloodbuzz Ohio”

Broken Social Scene

She & Him – “Why do you let me stay here”

Superchunk Surfer Blood – “Swim (to Reach the End)”

Rogue Wave – “Good Morning”

Ra Ra Riot – “Boy”

Monotonix

Phantogram

The Sea & Cake

Papercuts

Phosphorescent

The Mumlers – “Coffin Factory”

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FREE TICKETS: 2010 Treasure Island Music Festival. Seriously.


Not to be crude, but this giveaway is going to make you pop a mind boner. We’ve got a pair of tickets to the most fantastical, magical, chub-inducing festival—a.k.a.
—the Treasure Island Music Festival. We know, you can barely contain the excitement pulsating through your extremities. Beware, people are watching you. So keep it down, perverts.

To win, tell us (below) what would comprise the perfect date night in San Francisco. Start to finish. And your answer should include music, and a nightcap, of course. The winner will be announced here: facebook.com/theowlmag. Again, COMMENT HERE. FIND OUT WHO WINS ON OUR FACEBOOK PAGE. (Be sure to fan us, Casanova.)

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Treasure Island 2010 Lineup Announced


The Internet had it’s panties in a bundle recently as Treasure Island Festival rumors circulated like farts on an airplane. Well, it’s official now. The good people at Noise Pop and Another Planet have announced the lineup for San Francisco’s coolest music extravaganza and once again this is looking like the place to be. First of all, it’s on an island. Sorry Outside Lands. And there’s no performance overlap, so your chances of seeing every act are good. Stay tuned for MP3s to get you motivated. As if you need them.

Saturday, Oct. 16:

LCD Soundsystem

Deadmau5

Kruder & Dorfmeister (Live)

Miike Snow

!!! (Chk Chk Chk)

Die Antwoord

Little Dragon

Four Tet

Holy F—

Jamaica

Wallpaper

Maus Haus

Sunday, Oct. 17:

Belle & Sebastian

The National – “Bloodbuzz Ohio”

Broken Social Scene

She & Him – “Why do you let me stay here”

Superchunk

Surfer Blood – “Swim (to Reach the End)”

Rogue Wave – “Good Morning”

Ra Ra Riot

Monotonix

Phantogram

The Sea & Cake

Papercuts

Phosphorescent

The Mumlers – “Coffin Factory”

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LIVE REVIEW: The Mumlers, Vetiver @ Bottom of the Hill 5/26/2010


Vetiver's Andy Cabic

After a few slightly clumsy songs, Mumlers singer, Will Sprott, confided in the audience that the band is now shy a bassist and tambourine player, forcing the now five-piece act to improvise their roles during select songs. If there is such a thing as a happy accident, this seemed a great example. Hearing a tuba replace a bass during a 60s-esque, R&B, she-left-me song added just the perfect amount of cacophony to their vintage sound. However, Sprott’s butter-melting voice, which rivals that of Nina Simone, is the real comeliness of this San Jose band. Boys, you are representing in the South Bay and I am won the fuck over.

Vetiver certainly took an already warmed up crowd to new heights. The SF band, fronted by Andy Cabic, who co-wrote songs on Devendra Banhart‘s Cripple Crow, is an extremely chill folk get-up that tastefully trims their songs with a southern charm. However, the performance seemed slightly one-note for those of us who require a little more weight in our music. Yet, the slightly more pop-y songs in Vetiver’s repertoire almost reached the aforementioned weight requirements, but not quite.

One of life’s many astonishing moments is when the opening band sets the bar higher than the headliner can reach, and The Mumlers certainly dropped jaws in that respect. Well, at least the jaw of yours truly.

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