Archive for February 21st, 2006

It’s Official: Yuri Quits the Band

Tuesday, February 21st, 2006

Our dear bass player extraordinaire, Yuri Weber, has decided to leave Morex Optimo. We’ve worked with him for a long time, and and will miss him greatly. Here, from the mouth of Heather:

Quote:
yes, we’re really bummed… and i guess, if you know any wildly talented musicans with perfect pitch and impeccable time and exquisite sense of melody and who sing like angels and can play every instrument and can play
rock/country/punk/jazz/fusion/mathrock/metal/classical/klezmer/gamelan and have always wanted to play in 13/7 time with a sullen swede and smartass drummerchick, um. yeah. let us know.”

Here’s a grainy mobile-phone photograph of our last show together (thanks, roman). Ha ha! It’s like we’re playing into the sunset!
Morex Optimo's last show with Yuri: Wreck Room, February 10th, 2006

Stay tuned for auditions, to be announced here, once we regroup.

Gaelle Sharkya’s Stuffed Portobello mushrooms

Tuesday, February 21st, 2006

I had these while visiting with Virgil and Gaelle in Liverpool, England. Loved them. Also like the almost Haiku-like spareness…

1 x black olives
1 x pistachios
2 x goat cheese
spice w basil
all into a paste
heap on top of portobello mushroom

bake. then broil for crispness

“Viking News” reviews Beast of Reflection

Tuesday, February 21st, 2006

It’s always fun to see where our CD’s end up, whether it be the used bins at Amazon.com, or the “sound bytes” section of a college news paper. In this case on of our intrepid wandering CDs ended up at the Viking News, student news paper for Ocean County College. We love that the author, Kristina Mondo, had obviously done her research, reading through our bio and one-sheet (which is more than you can say for most reviewers), and that she takes some great chances. The introduction to her piece is marvelous…

Quote:
The big picture is seeing what our life is ultimately destined to become. It is like a crystal ball that enables us to see into the future. Is the person looking back at us, the beast of reflection?

Morex Optimo ponders that question and much more on its debut album with Broken Hill Music.

Morex Optimo is a Brooklyn-based art-rock band fusing rock, grunge and punk and producing a sound sure not to be heard anywhere else.

Kudos to the author for finally grasping one thing no other writers seem to have understood:

Quote:
Everything about Morex Optimo is unique, down to the name. Many meanings have been offered, from a 19th century medical instrument to a high-end cigar. However, the closest approximation is a distorted Latin phrase meaning “highest morals.” The band suggests that much like its music, each listener draws his or her own conclusions regarding the unusual name.

Quote:
Along with influences such as Kurt Weill, Spike Jones, Yo la Tengo, The Beach Boys and Tom Waits, this has enabled the band to fill its canvas with vast and vivid musical landscapes with many layers and textures. Morex Optimo has taken those influences and created intricate melodies, sharp and dissonant chords and tight vocal harmonies to create well crafted compositions.

Unfortunately, the title of the piece says it all:

Quote:
Morex Optimo has weird name, titles


The longer we do this stuff of making music the more I have to conclude that the “creative set,” as well as the literati and intelligentsia are just as conformist, afraid of challenges, and averse to insight as the rest of the populace. Hate the album, love the album, I don’t care, but you all can do better than “weird,” no?

Finally, this will probably go down in history as one of our favorite quotes:

Quote:
If you like political noise and know every Black Sabbath song, this is the band for you.

Many thanks to Kristina Mondo for listening to us and for taking the time to write. And yes, we do mean that.

You can read the full review here.

“pouring in from some weird abyss”–Deli Mag

Tuesday, February 21st, 2006

Not sure who the copy editors are at the Deli (I’m assuming they even have some), but it’s nice to see our album finally made its way to the top of what must be some very deep stacks of CDs-to-be-reviewed, as Beast of Reflection was released way back in 2004. We’re actually quite happy with this little blurb. It shows that a modicum of thought went into it rather than the usual “agh!!! me no understand!!!” we get from most places. Thanks to The Deli Magazine for giving some space for us. Keep up the good work.

Morex Optimo has an abundance of good ideas. Their experimental vibe applied to noise and rock seems to be divided up into acts, each song divided and sewn into a whole. While their short attention span may keep their melodies at bay with each new tide, their vocalist, pouring in from some weird abyss, saves the day, making Be[a]st of Reflection a thoughtful and poetic effort in the end. --Katie Hasty, Time Out New York. Feb 5, 2006.
Thank you Katie Hasty, for listening, thinking, and responding.