Is Father John Misty playing a character?

FJM-2Photos by Justin Yee // Written by Mike Frash //

Father John Misty strolled onto stage for his first performance in over a year on January 16th among the redwoods of Felton, Calif., in a venue that looked like a barn mixed with a classy old train depot. As the memorable show progressed, I found myself wondering where the line between Josh Tillman the man and Father John Misty the artist begins and ends.

Father John Misty aka Josh Tillman played every song from I Love You, Honeybear (due out February 10th, just in time for Valentine’s Day) for the first time live, not counting the astounding Letterman performance of “Bored in the USA”.

Launching into the schmaltzy earworm “I Love You, Honeybear”, FJM snatched up a stuffed green teddy bear held high in the air by a young fan near the front and waltzed with it to the romantic refrain, only to punt it back into the audience at the peak of the first dystopian verse. A talented new supporting band has his back, yet FJM still drops to his knees and manhandles the mic stand as he did on prior tours.

Early on he called out the audience as being “up to no good” for singing along to the new songs, referencing the awkward new live music reality when an audience shows they have overplayed a leaked record before it’s even available to purchase.

The house lights briefly came up during “True Affection” and the audience blinked and looked around at each other, giving me the sense that some kind of mockery was being played on us – and we the audience weren’t in on the joke. This is the guy, after all, who performed on the other side of a giant iPhone the last time we saw him. So how much of this is an act?

Is Father John Misty following in Steven Colbert’s footsteps, subjugating authenticity for the sake of satire, essentially holding up a mirror to this self-entitled generation, reflecting a sea of endless selfies? Is Josh Tillman playing a character, or is Father John Misty an evolving artist being true to himself?

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Father John Misty has kept much of his second album under wraps, except for this press release via Sub Pop, which of course is hilarious and revealing.

It’s penned by the artist himself, and begins “Father John Misty aka Josh Tillman, says of the album I Love You, Honeybear …” An important distinction between Josh Tillman and Father John Misty is quickly established as he embraces the FJM label and degrades his real name to “also known as” status. So these details are told through the lens of FJM (bold emphasis his):

I Love You, Honeybear is a concept album about a guy named Josh Tillman who spends quite a bit of time banging his head against walls, cultivating weak ties with strangers and generally avoiding intimacy at all costs. This all serves to fuel a version of himself that his self-loathing narcissism can deal with. We see him engaging in all manner of regrettable behavior.

In a parking lot somewhere he meets Emma, who inspires in him a vision of a life wherein being truly seen is not synonymous with shame, but possibly true liberation and sublime, unfettered creativity. These ambitions are initially thwarted as jealousy, self-destruction and other charming human character traits emerge. Josh Tillman confesses as much all throughout.

First of all, taking Father John Misty, his music or this press release too seriously might be my first mistake. But I Love You, Honeybear is Father John Misty telling the tale of his former self, Josh Tillman, and how he transformed into the bewildering, intriguing character he is today.

We learned in Fear Fun that his “reality is realer than yours” and that he “never liked the name Joshua.” The question still remains, is FJM showing his authentic self, or will he end up looking like the next Ima Robot?


[interview starts at 16:14]

Father John Misty’s hour and a half therapy session on WTF with Marc Maron in late 2013 (as he recorded I Love You, Honeybear) is a primary source in looking behind the curtain. Tillman recollects that he wasn’t allowed to listen to “secular music” growing up, something he referred to as “a death sentence.” His first 10 records, all released as under the moniker J. Tillman, played it safe with literal dark and moody lyricism, never gaining him much traction in the Seattle music scene.

He realized during the J. Tillman years that he might be better at between-song joking and commentary than songwriting based on the crowd’s reaction during shows where he opened for other acts. He worked as a dishwasher, at a bakery and most notably as the drummer for Fleet Foxes — but Tillman expresses he’s always been drawn to things with immediate cause and effect, and that his experience with Robin Pecknold’s outfit made him realize he was an “unhappy narcissist.” He actually did drop it all to wander the Western U.S. and write a novel, something Tillman credits for helping to find his narrative voice.

That’s when the breakdown happened. He says it happened over “Josh Tillman the songwriter and failing to recognize how my value or self worth was tethered to success or lack thereof. I was afraid to face what I was.”

Maron brings up the concept of authenticity early in the interview, and Tillman replied, “That’s a sticky one, God knows what that means. Aesthetic authenticity is like hunting for shadows with a flashlight…”

“This conversation of authenticity played a big role in the shift to this writing style, which I arbitrarily deemed Father John Misty.” Tillman had taken a trip to the mountains of Big Sur for some soul searching just down the road from Felton, and he describes a moment of realization he had naked in a tree dosed on psilocybin:

“I spent my whole life developing this vernacular, this sense of humor, this way of speaking, this way of thinking, this worldview, and I had never really implemented it into my music.”

Something clicked that day, and he took this new thought process into the studio for Fear Fun. To recognize this musical right turn, he changed his stage name from J. Tillman to Father John Misty in a random convo with a roommate on a “why not?” whim. “The whole purpose of this name is that it’s just some dumb shit I would call myself, and it looks hilarious on a marquee, it looks like some Christian Science Puppet Show.” His name could just as well be Father John Sassypants.

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Father John Misty expressed his interest in Norman Mailer, one of the founders of creative nonfiction, when he appeared on the WTF podcast. He also condemned hippies and Mumford & Sons while giving props to the Grateful Dead. But the nod to new journalism, attributing a fictional literary style & form onto fact-based journalism, helps to explain the question of character versus authenticity.

“With the music, the fact that I’m interested in including all of my humanity, putting everything into the songs, that means I want drugs to be in there, I want whatever sex there is to be in there, I want religion to be in there. I want everything to be in there, but unfortunately drugs take a lot of real estate in people’s minds…I’m just interested in including real details.”

With this knowledge, the fog begins to clear. Father John Misty’s lyricism draws from his experiences and personal reality, his thoughts and memories. He might enhance his narrative prose as any great storyteller does, but most importantly he leaves a sense of mystery in tact.

He may have grown into the head tossing, “horny manchild mad mommas boy” that owns the stage like a boss today. But Father John Misty is clearly the vehicle that Tillman is most creative and comfortable in as an artist, channeling his wondrous, insane inner monologue for us to enjoy. Seems real to me.

FJM’s suspicious thoughts on the search for authenticity make sense after this exploration: “Where people look for authenticity, I think it’s a little misguided. I think authenticity is really intangible. It’s easier to see than describe.” This idea is explored throughout I Love You, Honeybear, particularly in “Holy Shit”, where he says, “That’s now myth, that’s now real” in the same breath. Father John Misty seems to strive for ambiguity, avoiding spoon-fed messaging, which at least partially explains his appeal.

Father John Misty has struck a sweet spot in the collective minds of indieheads by Trojan-horsing the singer-songwriter genre with subversive storytelling, and the strength of his new material ensures his rise in stature.

Now his PR campaign is rightfully taking a parallel tone with his music leading up to the album release, helping us to dive deeper into the rabbit hole of duality, that we love him and hate him at the same time. He’s launched Streamline Audio Protocol (SAP), his new website that allows you to listen the new album stripped down to the most basic stems in karaoke-like, instrumental form. This satirical take on the current stream-a-week-before-album-release model and the ubiquitous nature of start ups is as bitingly effective as the lyrics in his LP2.

Anyone that can pull off the line “kissing my brother in my dreams or finding God knows in my jeans” from the ballad “When You’re Smiling And Astride Me” deserves the world’s attention. Perhaps this is the part where Father John Misty gets all he ever wanted?

Father John Misty at Bret Harte Hall in Felton, CA // Photo by Carrie Frash

Father John Misty at Bret Harte Hall in Felton, CA // Photo by Carrie Frash

Arcade Fire’s masterful album marketing, concert promo case study

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Arcade Fire performed at Capital Studios in Los Angeles October 28 to a small group of super fans and industry execs one evening prior to Reflektor officially releasing in the U.S. This abbreviated show, live-audio streamed by NPR Music, provided the first soundboard quality mix to listeners that haven’t been lucky enough to see Arcade Fire (or The Reflektors) in Montreal, Brooklyn, Miami or at the Bridge School Benefit. Sure, the Bridge School Benefit show was video webcasted, but only three songs from Reflektor received the stripped down, acoustic treatment that is customary at Neil Young’s yearly gathering this past weekend.

The performance Monday night provided further proof that Arcade Fire are the band of a generation, both in a live and studio context; the chamber pop group arrived overnight in 2004 and has consistently impressed with their frenzied live show, improving with each tour. This 10-song performance Monday solidifies they are a group driven by progression and an evolving sound — they will only get more quintessential with time as they sell out arenas and headline festivals throughout 2014.

Arcade Fire’s ingenious marketing campaign is a case study in using a band’s strength of performing live to help promote and encourage the purchasing of a new album. First, Reflektor street art started appearing in metropolitan areas all over the world in August. An interactive video arrived for “Reflektor” in September, integrating the viewer into the “It’s just a reflektor!” peak of the song. Then mysterious posters appeared in Montreal, then again in New York & Miami, promoting shows by “The Reflektors”. By touring in small spaces throughout the slow burning process of releasing previews and snippets of virtually every song on the album, the buzz has never slowed down. These intimate shows served as warm ups gigs for the band, and a genius marketing tool. If you pre-ordered the album, you received a code that gives you priority tickets to an Arcade Fire show in the next year. (I wonder if they will offer early access for Coachella through their website?)

Then “Afterlife”, “Here Comes The Night Time”, “We Exist” and “Normal People” premiered on Saturday Night Live and a concert-based feature, and some songs were reinforced on The Colbert Report. The day the album leaked last Thursday, Arcade Fire had the entire album streaming on YouTube within four hours, stemming the digital thievery by offering something better. They synced Reflektor and the album’s lyrics with the 1959 film Black Orpheus à la “Dark Side of Oz”, and it was nothing short of mesmerizing before it was pulled (“Afterlife” is still available below). And on the day of Reflektor‘s release (October 29), Arcade Fire has chosen to make available a live recording of an incredible performance from the night before (view it above).

It all signifies Arcade Fire are a group of innovators, bucking trends and norms through new angles of marketing and incentives. But more importantly, Reflektor is a classic record because it showcases a band that has improved sonically while developing more effective, vital lyricism.

The overt theme in Arcade Fire’s fourth album is life after death, most notably in “Afterlife”, “It’s Never Over (Oh Orpheus)”, and “Reflektor”. Win Butler has referred to Reflektor as “a mash up of Studio 54 and Haitian voodoo,” and it is clear the band’s trip to Haiti two years ago heavily impacted the group. Members of the group connected with local Haitians through traditional rara, the additional drumming the group has brought with them to the studio and on tour. Régine Chassagne draws her lineage from the Caribbean island — the place has been an influence and rallying point for the group since they featured “Haiti” toward the end of Funeral. Many parts of Haiti the country have been stricken by disease and squalor since the horrific earthquake in 2010. Then add the cultural layer of Haitian voodoo into the mix, which revolves around connecting with and brining people back from the dead, and the source of the storytelling and lyricism of Reflektor begins to come into focus.

More important than wondering what happens after the inevitability of death, the meat of Reflektor harnesses the idea of dancing, celebrating and embracing the best moments of life. “Here Comes the Night Time”, one of the best songs on the record, creates a divide then asks a semi-hypothetical question:

They say heaven’s a place and they know where it is. But you know where it is? It’s behind a gate that won’t let you in. And when they hear the beat coming from the street, they lock the door. But if there’s no music up in heaven than what’s it for?

This multi-tempo sequence might be the part of Reflektor that resonates strongest with many Arcade Fire fans. The payoff line “When you look in the sky, just try looking inside, God knows what you might find…” leaves no room for ambiguousness. In a less obtrusive way than Neon Bible, Butler and Company are still pleading for people to think for themselves.

When Win Butler greeted the audience by literally saying hello to “liberal America” via the NPR webcast, he clearly continued a common Arcade Fire thread that has existed since the beginning, the idea of Us versus Them. This ever-present theme is inert within Arcade Fire, and it was most notably projected through Butler’s introduction of “Normal Person” Monday night in Hollywood (Listen at 41:01 at the top of the page):

Thank you liberal america, to all the blue states, and all the gay people stuck living in Atlanta, and all the parts of everywhere you believe people should be able to marry whoever they want, and if you get sick it’s ok if we all pitch in.

Arcade Fire clearly want to use their influence to keep pushing what they believe in, which is frankly inspiring and fearless. These are the qualities that exist in a group that defines a generation — Arcade Fire aren’t merely reacting to contemporary social issues, they are engaging and driving the conversation.

When it comes to the sound Arcade Fire has developed with Reflektor, and understanding the impact of James Murphy’s production assistance, it’s not so sad anymore that Murphy retired LCD Soundsystem. He did quip in Shut Up And Play The Hits that one of his reasons for retiring his band revolved around not being able to produce an Arcade Fire record because he was on tour. James Murphy ‘the producer’ could leave a bigger impact than James Murphy ‘the artist’ in the end. His fingerprints are all over one of the best records of 2013 — the tempo changes in “Here Comes the Night Time” to the disco groove in “We Exist” smell like they were concocted in DFA’s Brooklyn studios.

The setlist from the performance in LA Monday night is pretty much what Reflektor would look like had it been a singular record (except “Awful Sound (Oh Eurydice)” was left out. I don’t care what anyone says, that song is incredible.) A wonderful tribute to the late Lou Reed bookended a sparkling “Supersymmetry”, starting the song with “Perfect Day” and splicing in “Satellite of Love” in toward the end. This is, in fact, a must listen (around 17:10 in the top video). “It’s Never Over (Oh Orpheus)” begins with a fast paced, crunchy dance beat that heightens the live version right away. Massive reverb is placed on the line “If there’s no music in heaven, than what’s it for?” in “Here Comes the Night Time”, announcing that this part of the song deserves extra attention. For the first time on this tour, it appears they are not ending with “Wake Up” for the first time, another signifier the group is moving forward artistically. There are many added texture layers throughout this performance that are absent from Reflektor that simply enhance the music, elevating Arcade Fire to the level of “better live”, not to take away from Reflektor in any way.

SETLIST
Reflecktor
Flashbulb Eyes
Afterlife
Supersymmetry (Lou Reed — “Perfect Day” intro, “Satellite of Love” outro)
It’s Never Over (Oh Orpheus)
We Exist
You Already Know
Normal Person
Here Comes The Night Time

ENCORE
Sprawl II