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mr. Gnome



Last Updated: 11/25/2009

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Status: Single
City: CLEVELAND
State: OHIO
Country: US
Signup Date: 3/10/2005

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Wednesday, September 30, 2009 
The Ambitions of Instinct
Mr. Gnome pushes its sharp, shape-shifting art-punk to moody peaks

 
Sam Meister and Nicole Barille are Mr. Gnome.


Mr. Gnome
9 p.m., Oct. 1. Cafe Nine, 250 State St., New Haven.

$5. 203-789-8281, cafenine.com.

Nicole Barille and Sam Meister know the value of surprise. When the Clevelanders work together underneath the moniker of Mr. Gnome, the concept of contrast gives their dusky indie/punk/art rock mesh a striking sensibility.

Leading most Gnome compositions is Barille’s voice, a feminine thing that can leap from a breathy, wounded wisp to a smoldering shout to a commanding bark. The fluctuations are jarring and often unexpectedly lively. Similarly, when songs move from echoing, stark vocals to impenetrable blasts of distortion (produced by Barille’s guitar) and fits of percussion (made by Meister at the drums) and back again to vocals, the changes feel weighty. Through much of their 2008 disc Deliver This Creature (El Marko Records), zigzagging gives Mr. Gnome’s sound unfamiliar thrills.

Appropriately, Mr. Gnome was founded on a tenet of contrast.

“We always started with that soft/loud dynamic,” recalls Barille in a recent phone conversation.

Inspired by surrealism, abstract art, psychedelic rock and experimental inclinations of the likes of Portishead and Tool, the tandem immediately decided they would venture into any corner they found interesting.

“We always liked heavy stuff and pretty, ethereal stuff, too,” she notes. “We never tried to limit ourselves.”

Barille has an innate interest in songwriting. She emphasizes the group’s composing is grounded in an organic approach. Tracks emerge from guitar riffs or simple melodies rather than full concepts. While tinkering, they end up getting comfortable with a song.

“[When] you spend so much time with the songs, it starts becoming natural to know where you want them to go,” she says. “I usually think the songs that come out best are the ones that we don’t have to tweak as much. We always try to make everything natural.”

The only problem with following your instincts is that imagination can often take you in odd directions.

For example, when putting together November’s Heave Yer Skeleton, the act shelved 10 compositions.  “We started messing around with more of a psychedelic sound and there were songs that just weren’t stopping,” says Barille with a laugh. “They were 10-minute-long songs. They are cool when you are creating. Then, you step back and you’re like, ‘I don’t know. This is ridiculously long and has 10 different movements!’”

When Mr. Gnome laid down its new album at L.A.’s Pink Duck Studios (the recording headquarters of Queens of the Stone Age singer Josh Homme), the duo dealt with more creative over-stimulation.

“The amount of equipment they had was outrageous,” Barille says. “You almost had to limit yourself to what you started working with because you had 500 amps to choose from.”

Incorporating hollow body guitar, unfamiliar pedals and vintage amplifiers, the band hopes to give Heave “more of a classic feel than the last record.”

No matter how they alter their aesthetic, Mr. Gnome will have to frequently contend with comparisons to other male-female combinations. Barille can deal with that.

“I don’t think we sound like The White Stripes even though that’s the one people always pull out just because that’s the most famous male-female duo.” (Truth be told, their enterprising tendencies make The Dresden Dolls a stronger reference point.) “We don’t try to limit ourselves just because there are two of us,” she says, “but I’m sure that comes across because, y’know, there are only two of us.”

http://www.newhavenadvocate.com/article.cfm?aid=14752

Monday, September 21, 2009 
Hey Everyone,

Our upcoming second full-length album, titled Heave Yer Skeleton, has been scheduled for a release date of November 10, 2009.  You can listen to the first single off of Heave Yer Skeleton, titled "Slow Side" on our myspace page and get yer free download! 

Also we are releasing our debut album, Deliver This Creature on vinyl today!  Please visit our store - http://mrgnome.bigcartel.com/ - to purchase the 12" vinyl.

Our U.S. tour starts October 1st.  Please check our page for dates...many more to come...

Thanks to everyone for being so good to us.  We love you.

love,
us.

Sunday, August 23, 2009 

Category: Music
So I know we said we'd never do this, but we did.  We're officially on twitter.  We're sorry it had to come to this.  It wasn't our idea.  So anyone who wants their face tweeted can follow our shit at: 
Monday, August 10, 2009 

Category: Music
We just wrapped up the final track for our upcoming album.  Adam Korbesmeyer was nice enough to have us at Ante Up Audio in Cleveland to lay down a song we wrote in 3 days called, "Slow Side."  We're gonna be heading back out to Pink Duck Studios in the coming weeks to mix and master the beast.   

(Engineer Adam Korbesmeyer and Sam at the board)



























(This is a real gnome tattoo belonging to an intern at AUA)



























(Nicole and Black Beauty laying down some riffage)









Thursday, July 09, 2009 

Category: Music
Our music video "Night of the Crickets" has won 2 Telly awards:

1. Art Direction
2. Cinematography





























Thursday, June 18, 2009 
Live

By Mel Mason

Mr. Gnome
Plush
Friday, June 12

Tucsonans tend to take their sweet time getting to live shows.  I know this, because I'm the dork who's always first in line.  Therefore, I was shocked when I arrived at Plush last Friday, and the back room was abuzz with at least 70 people before the show began.

Mr. Gnome consists of vocalist/guitarist Nicole Barille and drummer Sam Meister from Cleveland.  Their original indie-rock sound wildly fluctuated between simplicity and complexity.  Barille's voice wavered magnificently between innocence and angst, and her sometimes-frenetic, sometimes-subtle guitar work was superb.  Every bit of loud, jarring fuzz, and every note lingered delicately in space didn't seem the least bit contrived. Although it's clear Barille and Meister are thorough in their attention to detail, there's clearly room for improvisation, depending on what kind of night they're having.  Barille stated that they almost had to cancel the gig due to her voice giving out - and there's no way the audience would've known if she hadn't clued us in.

http://www.tucsonweekly.com/tucson/live/Content?category=1063790
Saturday, June 13, 2009 

• Weekly L.A.

MR. GNOME brings their psychedelic indie rock sound to THE SILVERLAKE LOUNGE in Silver Lake. Mr. Gnome is an incredible musical duo who's music gives the finesse of merging sharp and smooth sounds seems almost effortless. Nicole Barille's (guitar, vocals) bellowing voice rips through each song with audacious intensity and breathy vocals that waft airily through ethereal soundscapes. Her thundering guitar and Sam Meister's pounding drums are equally as acerbic and loud. You can check them out at www.myspace.com/mrgnome and www.mrgnome.com.


• L.A. Weekly Events:

A set by the fascinating Cleveland duo 
Mr. Gnome, in which Nicole Barille's dreamy/spacy vocals and jaggedly supersonic post-art guitar riffs are hammered back to the gods by Sam Meister's masterfully Bonham-esque drumming. Seriously heavy stuff, and seriously recommended.
Saturday, June 13, 2009 
Interview with Nicole Barille and Sam Meister of Mr. Gnome; live at Plush Friday
06/12/2009 04:02 PM
Dan Shapiro
Mr. Gnome from Cleveland, Ohio has a certain peripatetic relationship as a band—they are a duo that absolutely love to travel.

Their dynamic relationship makes each note a potentially magic occasion. Mr. Gnome sound like an indie rock, psychedelia hybrid like early ’90s trip-hop and alt-rock (i.e. Potishead meets the Smashing Pumpkins). Lead by Sam Meister’s primal drums and the strong feminine voice of Nicole Barille, the two-piece produce a paired down, sweetly sonic indie sound that is aggressive yet beautiful like an aria at a Queen of the Stone Age concert.

On their most acclaimed song “Night of the Crickets,” Barille’s breathy vocals float over minimalist guitar repetition that is based on a, “rigid dichotomy of soft vs. loud and masculine vs. feminine.” Meister’s drums beat in the internecine dualities as Mr. Gnome walk the line between pleasure and pain, which Barille and Meister agree is all in their bi-polar minds.

Below, Nicole Barille and Sam Meister get in the groove and explain their two-dimensional sound, their love of TV’s dreamweaver Garth Marenghi and why they love being on the road and recording their latest album right here in Tucson.

AZNB: Your music often gets compared twofold in that it is soft and loud, male and female, etc. Tell us a little bit about embracing your bipolar sound and how your song writing process has come to reflect these dualities in your music.

NB: Music, like any art form, should be a true representation of your thoughts and emotions…in our minds. That may be why we are so bipolar in our songwriting. We never wanted to hold back or eliminate any of the sounds that were being created naturally, so we let our freak flag fly.

SM: I think any time we sit down to write a song we don’t ever put limits on where it can go. A lot of times that means within one song we end up expressing two completely opposite dynamics. We just try to be honest with what we’re doing and as natural as we can be and the end product tends to result in schizophrenic, psychedelic, drug-induced music.

Did you originally have this kind of sound “in mind” when you first started playing together or did it come about organically through the use of hallucinogens?

NB: We never had any sound in mind…quite frankly, we didn’t really have any idea of what we were doing. We were both just inspired by so many different types of music and never limited ourselves by trying to sound like a particular band, but instead embracing all of the sounds that were coming naturally from those influences.

In a blog you posted on your MySpace page with your BFF, Justin Smith, he describes you as, “the Enya of metal” and Meister as the “Yanni of drums.” This is an awesome description.

NB: Thank you.

Tell us a little more about your fascination with the brilliant spoof sci-fi show “Garth Marenghi’s Dark Place.”

NB: We actually just stumbled upon Garth Marenghi when we were recording our last album at Pink Duck. We were hooked from the beginning. It is ridiculous and made us laugh till our sides hurt. I can’t say enough good things about it…

SM: If someone were to ask us, “Compare your music to a television show” I would say, “Garth Marenghi’s Dark Place.” It may be the best show television has ever seen…next to “Murder She Wrote.”

If you had originally whistle a tune to Rick Dagless, Thornton Reed, Lucien Sanchez or Liz Asher, which one would it be and whom would you want to spend a meaningful night out with?

NB: I would have to choose Thornton Reed. If he played his cards right, I’d have to give it up that night. It’s all in his mustache.

SM: I would pick Lucien Sanchez because he’s got a beautiful voice. He seems to be a real caring, loving, nurturing person.

Is it true that Mr. Gnome is an officially homeless band?

NB: No, not any more, but if it makes us sound cooler, than we’ll say yes.

SM: With the way the economy is headed, we could be there again real soon.

What is it about being on the road that keeps you touring?

NB: The progression that we see in every aspect of what we do—our playing, the songwriting, the audiences growing, etc. It just seems to make sense to keep touring at this moment.

SM: The gas station hot dogs.

You just produced your first full-length album Deliver this Creature (El Marko, 2008) last year and you’ve been touring in support of that album pretty steadily. What else is on the horizon for Mr. Gnome?

NB: We just recorded our follow-up, which has yet to be mixed. We were hoping for an October release but it’s looking like we’ll have to wait until early next year to release it. Until then, we’ll finish this tour up, spend the summer in Cleveland and then head back out on tour this fall.

SM: We’ll continue to tour. Should be back out again in September/October. We’d love to try and head over to Europe for a tour. Just keep on keepin’ on…

You made a whole slew of top-whatever lists of 2008 with Deliver This Creature. Does that put a lot of pressure on you for the follow-up?

NB: Nah, not at all. Despite all the love we got from many “Best of Lists,” we’re still a pretty unknown band. Maybe if we were the Jonas Brothers—now those guys have some pressure.

Tell us all the details you have about your upcoming album.

NB: We got invited to record out in Los Angeles at Josh Homme’s (Queens of the Stone Age) Pink Duck Studios by Justin Smith, the studio manager. We spent seven crazy days tracking the album and then went back to Cleveland to finish up a bunch of vocals, guitar overdubs, etc. We have 13 songs tracked right now—not sure if every one is going to make the album.

SM: The new album feels to us like an extension of where Deliver this Creature left off. We expand on a lot of elements we only touched upon—a little more space, a little more melody, a lot more drugs and a lot more sex.

*After producing two highly acclaimed EPs, Echoes On the Ground in 2005
and the Self-titled EP a year later, you recorded your first full-length album right here in Tucson at Craig Schumacher’s Wavelab Studios. Kris Kerry of Lost Barrio Artists is also your booker. What’s with all the ties in Tucson?*

NB: Kris and Sam share a fond love of Bigfoot and misanthropes.

SM: We met Kris Kerry a few years ago and he’s been one of our earliest supporters. Him and Cathy Rivers have been behind us pretty much since day one. We met a lot of great people through them, including the folks over at Wavelab, plus Kris makes a mean hummus.

Is there anything you’d like to say to Tucson?

NB & SM: We love you, Tucson. Thank you for always being so good to us.

Come out and be good to Mr. Gnome who play with locals The Runaway Five and Sketching in Stereo this Friday, June 12. The show starts at 9:30 p.m. and is only $5.
Wednesday, June 10, 2009 
We are very sad to have to cancel the show in L.A. tonight and Merced last night. Anyone that was at the San Francisco show on Monday witnessed me blowing my voice out on stage. We hate canceling shows and we were really looking forward to these. We will be back in September/October. Again, we are so sorry to have to cancel. Hope you all understand. We love you... ~ Nicole & Sam
Wednesday, April 29, 2009 

Category: Music
Well, we're on our way back to the Cleve. We'll be wrapping up the tracking of the new tunes at Ante Up Audio. Doing some vocal overdubs and guitar noodling. We've got about 14 songs rolling right now, not sure how many will make the official release, but we'll probably make them all available in some fashion at some point (you may have to do sexual favors for them).

On a side note, we were recently invited to play a festival in Seattle this summer called The Georgetown Music Festival. It's an outdoor event and it looks like it'll be a lot of fun. We'll be doing a little tour out and back starting late May and ending late June. Dates below with more tba.

05/27 St Louis MO @ The Firebird
05/28 Chicago IL @ The Darkroom
05/29 Minneapolis MN @ 501 Club
05/30 Kansas City MO @ The Record Bar
05/31 Denver CO @ Bender’s
06/01 Salt Lake City UT @ Kilby Court
06/06 Seattle WA @ Georgetown Music Festival
06/08 San Francisco CA @ Elbo Room
06/11 San Diego CA @ Bar Pink
06/12 Tucson AZ @ Plush
06/13 Phoenix AZ @ The Wyndham Hotel
06/14 Albuquerque NM @ Atomic Cantina
06/16 Lawrence KS @ The Replay Lounge
06/18 Dallas TX @ Double Wide
06/19 Austin TX @ Trophy’s
06/26 Hamtramck MI @ Small’s
06/27 Cleveland OH @ Beachland Tavern
07/17 Pittsburgh PA @ Bloomfield Bridge Tavern