Andrew Bird does it all—forward and backward The eclectic musician loops instrumentals together, weaving an electronic orchestra in his live shows BY AARON BURKHALTER FREELANCE REPORTER When Andrew Bird takes the stage, he slings his guitar over his back and wields a worn violin in his hand. He holds his violin like a ukulele and begins plucking a pizzicato syncopation. He steps on a pedal on the ground and the synco pation continues while he adds an other syncopation over the top of it. Soon his looping device is cranking out layer upon layer of violin, creat ing a dense electronic orchestra to REMEMBER CHEF JEVON FROM HAMILTON? NOW HE’S COOKIN’ UP BAYOU BBQAT HORSEHEAD $7.00 CAR BOMBS $2.25 PABST $5.75 DOUBLE WELLS $5.50 LONG ISLANDS KITCHEN HOURS 11:30 a.m. - 2:00 a.tn. SEVEN DAYS A WEEK Expanded brunch menu Sat - Sun §99 WEST BROADWAY • 683-3154 Fried Catfish $7.75 Gumbo $5.50 Pulled Pork Sandwich $8.00 Oyster Shooters (Friday & Saturday) Five varieties to choose from $1.50 back Bird's guitar, voice, glockenspiel and whistling. It's a far cry from the music Bird created in the late 1990s. His first band, Andrew Bird’s Bowl of Fire, rode on the popular wave of the neo swing movement, along with the popular East Coast swingers the Squirrel Nut Zippers. The five-piece Bowl of Fire cranked out antiquated gypsy swing and blues with Bird's virtuoso fiddling, melodic voice and abstract lyrics. His traditional sound accompanied songs about cloning sheep and Etch-A-Sketches. But Bird's ambitions reached fur therthan Bowl of Fire and the Ameri can-roots music that it championed. Bird found himself constricted by working with a consistent group. A band playing the same kind of parts every time pinned down his songs and restricted his experimentation. "I needed to indulge myself again and let the songs breathe a little more," Bird said in a phone interview. Bird bought a farm in Illinois to give himself some stretching room for his music to grow. He started working with the looping equipment that would become the cornerstone of his live sound and began forming a new style without the constraints of a regular band. Bird has almost exclusively played all the music on his most recent recordings. With the exception of rotating drummers, the instrumentation, both on stage and on CD, is all his own. "It's nice to have total control," Bird said. "There's more chance that your music will end up weirder." The results are, in fact, weird, and that's a com pliment. The music on his newest album, "The Mysterious Production of Eggs, ^ defies conventional definition. The ambient layers of violin accom panied by Bird's eccentric lyrics j create an unusual world. The music draws from so many different musical traditions that it is impos sible to pinpoint a domi nant influence; it spans sounds from folk to Indi an to rock. The sound is as twisted and compelling asthe lyrics it accompanies. Bird's eccentric approach to lyrics may be the only thing that re mains from his Bowl of Fire days. His lyrics are sprinkled with what he Courtesy calls "fake palindromes." A palin drome is a word or phrase that is spelled the same way backward and forward, such as "race car" or 'never odd or even." "I was looking at real palin dromes and noticed that they kind of have a similar cadence to them," Bird said. Bird starts writing his lyrics by making strange vowel and consonant patterns, bringing mean ing in after the fact. In the song titled after his lyrical motiva tion, "Fake Palindromes," Bird sings, "My dewy-eyed Disney bride what tried swapping your blood with formaldehyde." "Late at night after a couple drinks, who's going to bother to check whether that's a real palindrome or not?" Bird said. Whatever Bird is doing, it's working. He has toured endless ly since the release of "Eggs" in February. In the lastyear^e ^gained a sudden and m surprising following in Europe. "It grows very quickly overthere," Bird said. He has had no problem gaining media attention on the other side of the Atlantic. "Whereas it's taken me eight years to gain an BIRD, page 11 High-speed wireless internet and a $25 gift card. Someone's been very, very good this year. Clearwire® has something special for you this holiday: high-speed internet service for only $19.99 a month for the first three months,* plus a $25 gift card** It's our best offer of the season. So sign up for the internet service you can take anywhere in our coverage area, and get the gift card you can spend anywhere VISA® is accepted. 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