A
Brief History of BOTM
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It was an odd sight to behold: A sweaty audience jammed into the
Rat, then known as Boston's premier punk-rock club, to watch four
musicians surrounded by a band of keyboards, pursuing some intricate
and decidedly non-punk improvisations. Such was the scene in 1981,
when Birdsongs of the Mesozoic quietly played its first gig. Two
of the band's musicians, Roger
Miller and Martin Swope, were well-known as members of Mission
of Burma, arguably the most popular and adventurous rock band
in town. But Birdsongs was something else again: With the two
Burma members changing instruments (tapelooper Swope played lead
guitar in Birdsongs, while guitarist Miller
switched over to piano), the all-instrumental band pursued chamber
music, cartoon soundtracks, Eno-esque soundscapes, and everything
in between.
Joined by accomplished organist Rick Scott
and keyboardist Erik Lindgren -- who is
a garage-rock archivist, a successful writer of commercial jingles,
and leader of the experimental band Space Negros -- the band evolved
a trademark sound over its first few years; always keeping a safe
distance from conventional rock, but retaining enough tonal muscle
to keep the Burma fans hooked. The first full-length album, 1983's
MAGNETIC FLIP, matched covers of Stravinsky (a shortened "Rite
of Spring") and the "Rocky & Bullwinkle" theme; plus adventurous
original pieces that displayed a whimsy and lyricism seldom found
in the avant-garde. Instead of club dates they'd do theater concerts,
often accompanied by fanciful dinosaur films.
By
this time Burma had split up due to Miller's
hearing problems, but an odd thing happened: On the 1985 EP THE
BEAT OF THE MESOZOIC, the band had begun to approach the volume
of Burma; live performances of the EP's title track would find
all four band members seated on the stage floor banging drums,
hubcaps, and the stage itself. Rykodisc's SONIC
GEOLOGY CD includes the best material from the two EP's
and one album by the original lineup of the band.
With Roger
Miller looking to form a new guitar band (No Man) and to perform
solo shows, he left Birdsongs in 1988; saxophonist Ken
Field came in and brought a heavier jazz influence, heard
on the Cuneiform albums PYROCLASTICS
and FAULTLINE. Both find
the band rallying with Lindgren stretching out as a composer and
Swope's guitar coming to the fore. In 1991 Swope left as well,
but the band again endured, bringing in guitarist Michael
Bierylo. Though the original keyboard-driven sound has given
way to a more coventional band lineup, the mid-'90s find Birdsongs
still committed to pushing musical boundaries.