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Grand
Mal
Bad Timing
Arena Rock Recording Company, 2003

"new
york. grand mal. derelict buildings and leather jackets. 8/10"
– nme
"harkens back to the 70's heyday of rock with swaggering
melodies, distorted guitars and the appropriate pose of hedonistic
cynicism" -ny times
Dave Fridmann finally
gave in to my constant petitioning and allowed us back to his
studio for one more album. The band spent numerous weekends-from
October 2001 to May 2002 racking up Greyhound Bus mileage shuttling
between NYC and Fridmann's upstate New York TarBoxRoad Studios,
recording and mixing Bad Timing.
The
title track was inspired by a barroom conversation that I overheard
(or dreamt I overheard) about someone wanting to quit rock and
roll ("It's too late to cop out/too soon to dropout").
I think somewhere in the back of my mind it occurred to me that
rock and roll might be killing me. The song “Disaster
Film” articulates this fear.
“Baby,
run for your life
your friends are gonna eat you alive
they’re outta their minds on pills
their lives are like disaster films
they aint never gonna win no Nobel Prizes…”
But
I was wrong of course. Rock and roll never killed anybody.
Ultimately
Bad Timing was a response to Maledictions.
Maledictions was filled with synthetic sounds and played
by drug-addled people. On Bad Timing it was all organic
sounds and it was the first recording that I had ever made sober.
Bad
Timing features the leaner, meaner Grand Mal, including
longtime members Steve Borgerding on guitar, Jonathan Toubin
on bass, and Parker Kindred on drums and backing vocals. Stephen
Drozd of the Flaming Lips who was living in Fredonia at the
time added piano, organ, moog and slide guitar on four tracks.
Fellow Lip Michael Ivins was the assistant engineer. Old friend
and former Mercury Rev flutist Suzanne Thorpe contributed some
nice Thick-as-a-Brickian touches. And our usual secret weapon
Carmen Quinones added some soulful Exile on Main Street
backing vocals. Members of Hopewell, the Silent League and The
Fame also contributed.
This
was easily G.Mal’s finest album to date. A back to basics
affair recorded at lightening speed. The Faces, and the Hoople
were obvious touchstones – particularly evident in Borgerding’s
blues-based guitar bends and riffs. Most people have never heard
it. Perhaps it will be re-issued some day. You never know.
Due
to our low funds, a barter system was once again set up in order
to compensate (theoretically at least) Dave for his time. It
was arranged that the Mal would assist in constructing an addition
to the Tarbox Studios. This addition would be the climate controlled
tape storage room. Perhaps now, hammer in hand, I would finally
be able to make a worthwhile contribution to the history of
recorded music. I have fond memories of waking early one morning
and unloading a truckload of lumber. And on another Steve Borgerding
and I crawled under the studio and installed some nasty fiberglass
insulation. I had to be careful to avoid breathing in the particles.
Otherwise the vocals might not sound so good…. If you
listen carefully you can hear the pounding of a hammer in the
background of “Quicksilver” (no, it’s not
a homage to the Beach Boys’ Smile). We managed not to
destroy Tarbox or to mutilate ourselves too badly so it worked
out.
TRACK
LISTING
1.
1st
Round Knockout MP3.
2. Bad Timing
3. Quicksilver
4. Old Fashioned
5. Disaster
Film MP3
6. Duty Free
7. Get Lost
8. Flowin' Tide
9. Black
Aura MP3
10. Lay Right Down
11. Steal It Back
CREDITS
Bill
Whitten - vocals, guitar, keyboards
Steve Borgerding - guitar, bass, keyboards
Dave Fridman - piano, bass
Jonathan Toubin - keyboards, bass
Parker Kindred - drums, percussion, background vocals
Additional
personnel:
J. Russo - guitar
Steven Drozd - slide guitar, piano, Mellotron, organ
Reno Bo - slide guitar, background vocals
James Beaudreau - slide guitar
Suzanne Thorpe - flute
Justin Russo - Hammond B-3 organ
Carmen Quinones - background vocals
Christina Calph - background vocals
Produced
by Bill Whitten and Dave Fridmann.
Recorded at Tarbox Road Studios, Cassadaga, New York between
October 2001 & May 2002.
Read
press for Bad Timing
Read
more about this period in Grand Mal Mythology, Part 4 (2000
- 2002)
Return to Grand Mal
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