Mikael Jorgensen, Greg O'Keeffe & friends.
Mikael
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Posts by Mikael
Pronto gets jazzy-ups
Apr 6th
http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=32345
All Is Golden
Pronto | Contraphonic (2009)
By John Dworkin
There’s a new game in the music world: Six degrees of Wilco. Current Wilco keyboardist Mikael Jorgensen’s band Pronto is the latest degree in a wide network of Wilco connections. All Is Golden is Pronto’s debut and Jorgensen composed and sings all the material. The musical influences are varied: power pop; retro ’70s funk; Chicago Transit Authority pop/jazz horns; and songwriter Americana like The Band or Randy Newman. The dilemma of deciding whether to be a jack of all trades or master of none comes to mind, though it all out works well, with plenty of catchy hooks and memorable phrases, despite it feeling like there’s still a decision to be made.
More >
ScoutMD profiles "Listen Lover" from All Is Golden
Mar 31st
http://web.me.com/scoutmd/Scoutmd/Blog/Entries/2009/3/20_Listen_Lover.html
Today’s Song for the Day is “Listen Lover”, by Pronto, from their new release, All Is Golden.
This album is full of sunny 1970’s pop music, even though it was just released a week or so ago. Standout tracks, in my opinion, include today’s tune, “Good Friends Have Gone”, “When I’m On The Rocks”, “Say It All Night”, and “I Think So”, among others.
Eight of the thirteen tracks on this album are barely over three minutes or less. Maybe that’s from where the band gets its name.
I should mention that this band is fronted by Mikael Jorgensen, the keyboardist/ProTools expert of the band Wilco. I think Jim DeRogatis of the Chicago Sun-Times said it best when he wrote: Mikael Jorgensen: Not just the guy with the laptop.
Have a little of Mikael Jorgensen’s blog here.
And have a little of the official Pronto web site here.
And buy yourself some Pronto goodness here.
All Is Golden gets great, bad review
Mar 30th
Adam Coozer doesn’t like All Is Golden, yet awards it 1.5 stars.
http://www.readjunk.com/reviews/cdreviews/pronto-all-is-golden/
Side project from Wilco’s keyboardist with members of Iron & Wine and Cat Power.
Sound good? It isn’t.
The music is overdone and overproduced with a menagerie of horns, organs, and pianos, and is particularly shlocky on the many ballads and slow-tempo songs. Multi-instrumentalism is nothing new to these bands, but Pronto has an unfortunate Billy Joel/Elton John vibe that is hard to stomach.
Even if you like this music (assuming you’re in a Bar Mitzvah cover band), the vocals will surely be an impediment. Suffering from “non-vocalist stepping into vocalist in his side band” syndrome, Mikael Jorgensen’s is terribly off-key and strained. His voice and delivery remind me a bit of Keith Moon, another guy who shouldn’t have strayed from behind his instrument.
This isn’t good at all.
Bottom Line: Pronto is a good name, because that’s how quickly I wanted to shut this off.
Notable Tracks: “Listen Lover” is a jaunty tune that would’ve been good with another vocalist.
Overall Rating: 1.5 stars
Interview on Rock and Roll Ghost!
Mar 27th
http://rockandrollghost.blogspot.com/2009/03/interview-mikael-jorgensen-all-is.html
If you know much about the rock band Wilco by now you know that everyone involved works on projects outside of the group. Whether it be John Stirratt and Pat Sansone’s The Autumn Defense, or Nels Cline and Glenn Kotche’s assorted work or even those projects of band leader Jeff Tweedy.
But until now keyboardist Mikael (pronounced Michael) Jorgensen had been primarily known for his engineering work outside of Wilco. All that’s changed with the release of All Is Golden by Mikael’s band Pronto.
Released earlier this month on Contraphonic Records, All Is Golden is a straight-forward set of songs that fall into some sort of netherworld where good music in the tradition of the singer-songwriter style lives. It’s not current Top 40 nor is it necessarily stuck in the 70s-era that many in the press are tagging it as. What I like most about Pronto’s debut is that it’s earnest and honest. Jorgensen isn’t putting on airs and he’s not forcing an arch or discomforting style down the listener’s throat. I appreciate the ease in which the songs come across, even while knowing that any art that sounds easy is never so.
With his core band in place (Jorgensen is on lead vocals, keyboards and guitars, Greg O’Keeffe – who has been playing with Jorgensen for upwards of 13 years – is on drums, Erik Paparazzi – who has played with Cat Power and was in the band Lizard Music with Jorgensen in the 90s – is on guitar and Tunde Oyewole – who played with Jonathan Fire Eater’s Stewart Upton in the band The Childballads – is on bass), Jorgensen is now at the tail end of a quick promo tour for the debut album. They play tonight at Calvin Theatre in Northampton, MA and tomorrow night in Chicago at Martyr’s for a CD release show. I am lucky enough to be able to go to the Chicago show, but if you like the band and still want to see them live Jorgensen promises more touring this fall once Wilco’s tour plans have subsided.
Below is an edited conversation I had with Jorgensen two weeks back when he was a bit under the weather and trying to stay one step ahead of the myriad of issues he now has to deal with as a band leader. Go out and purchase Pronto’s All Is Golden, whether it be via paid download or at your local record store. And check out the band’s MySpace page for more information.
Rock & Roll Ghost: Is the Wilco schedule pretty much laid out so it’s easier to see what holes there are for Pronto to tour?
Mikael Jorgensen: For the most part. I know more or less what I’m going to be doing and where I’ll be through the end of September. This is my first time doing this. I just have to try and orchestrate those off times and keep the other guys in Pronto interested and excited without going ‘Alright guys, I’ll see you in six months! Take care. Don’t stop practicing!’ That’s going to be one of the challenges…I don’t think it’s going to be bad. We’re just going to have to figure it out when it comes.
With the gestations that Pronto has gone through – with members coming and going since its inception – would you rather prefer things remain loose or would you rather the band be a solid unit?
I would love for it to be a solid unit for a bunch of reasons. But that doesn’t mean it can’t move into something else. There’s something about the stability or the threat of stability that’s appealing at this point because it’s been so by hook or by crook for so long. In a way it’s about managing expectations for us and for our potential future fame.
What was the period of time that made up the recording of the album? It took years?
Yeah. I played my first solo show at the Hideout in Chicago in November 2005. I had been going through this time of personal upheaval. I had lost both my folks in under a year in 2004. A breakup with a girlfriend. All these things contributed to a not cool vibe. And then I just decided that I gotta do something to get my head straight and work on something positive and constructive. Let me play a solo show, let me see how that goes. That didn’t go awfully. Let me make a record, let’s see where that goes. We started recording in January 2006. We did maybe three sessions in total – January, March and April. It was at that time that I tried to pick up the momentum of taking charge of my own thing. Like I gotta move back closer to my family and my sister and my east coast roots. I moved back to Brooklyn to escape those really brutal Chicago winters. Not that New York is a tropical paradise comparatively. It’s all small differences.
I feel you on that. I barely made it through this past winter in Chicago.
Moving to New York I knew I would need to be in Chicago often for Wilco. So it wasn’t abandoning anything because I’d come back…I was just there for a month in February and then a month in October for recording and then for the residency last year. I’m always coming back. And then Sky Blue Sky happened as soon as I moved back to Brooklyn. And then I toured and I didn’t have the time to get to it. And also I was trying to put together a New York version of the band and concentrating on getting some live version of it together. That worked out fairly well and I made some friends, too. Then it was the standard New York dilemma where most musicians have four or five other things going on and scheduling becomes the biggest challenge. As soon as the Sky Blue Sky touring was finished in the fall of 2007. I mixed the record in Chicago at Soma, mastered it at the Chicago Mastering Services in January (2008).
And then I started this long process of trying to find a label. Through all the people I knew, especially from working at Soma and with Wilco. The most frustrating aspect of it all was the lack of response. I was in Chicago last fall and was talking to a good friend of mine. I was like ‘Man, I’m having a really hard time finding anyone to give me the time of day.’ I know the economy’s weird and the music industry’s in flux but c’mon, people still buy records and use iTunes. My friend Toby introduced me to Ben Schulman from Contraphonic and we started talking just around Halloween. It happened really quickly and without any hitches. I had CDs by Christmas and now it’s released. It’s turning into something real. Until this week it was like, ‘Oh I got a box of 300 of these in my living room.’ It’s actually taking on its own energy which is really exciting.
Is being in Wilco a help or a hindrance when you’re coming out with your own work?
It’s both to a certain degree. Clearly there’s an advantage to being able to say, ‘The guy from Wilco’s releasing a solo record or project’. It’s got a certain currency with writers and radio stations, it gives them a reason to consider it a little bit longer. The negative parts or the sort of difficulties…I can see it being a situation where people would maybe not listen to the music so much and base their opinions about it on a perception of Wilco and a perception of Jeff and a perception of ‘the laptop guy’. I guess that’s one of the things I’ve been keeping aware of. But it hasn’t happened. And the press so far has been really digging it and accurate [in their] descriptions. The 70s thing has been pushed a little too hard, but…it really is amazing that you say one thing or somebody writes one thing and then all of a sudden…
Did you feel any kind of reluctance to move back to Brooklyn and was their any worry caused about doing so?
It was kind of a risky move. I’ve always wanted to live in New York and here’s an opportunity. I stressed about it horrendously. To the point where I threw my back out the day I signed my lease. [I was] plagued with awful doubt. Sometimes it’s a little frustrating mostly because we don’t all have the same kind of access we used to have. But the band dynamic has, I think, changed for the better over the past couple of records where the writing sessions are explicitly scheduled. So everybody makes time. There were sessions before that were maybe a little less structured. It’s only an hour and a half, two hour flight to Chicago. If I had to get to Chicago tonight, it’d be expensive, but it could happen. The equipment thing is kind of a weird problem. Like I have my Wilco gear and that stays in Chicago and I have my Pronto equipment in New York. [With] some of it there’s a little bit of crossover. Having to check lots of bags on flights sometimes gets challenging.
And expensive I can imagine.
Well Wilco’s been faithful to an airline so we all have frequent flyer miles and travel benefits. So I get three bags free.
Bonus.
Yeah, total bonus. And frequent flyer miles so we get to take vacations and that kind of thing. It’s like standard business travel.
The whole Wilco organization is a myriad of interesting deals and special bonuses.
I was talking to Glenn once, ‘It’s funny I always see this Tiger Woods guy…I’m so sick and tired of seeing that guy everywhere.’ And then it dawned on me that the reason I see him is because he’s a business traveler advertisement. You are a business traveler. Oh right. I guess that’s true.
You mentioned something about having access. Was that access to Jeff or what did you mean by that?
Yeah, access to Jeff, access to the Loft. There was a general invitation to anybody who wanted to come and play music. That didn’t always happen, but an open invitation. I think that the reason that’s changed significantly is because everybody’s become quite busy with their family lives. It’s not so easy to duck out at 9 o’clock and get to the Loft for 2-3 hours and work on something when there’s children. I think it’s going to restructure some things for us but won’t seem too much different for fans.
So there haven’t been any issues with regards to moving with the band?
No. Our manager Tony is here as well. I figured that of all the places I could move it wasn’t like I was moving to Spokane. I have access to Tony and if I have to take care of anything I can go to the office right here in midtown.
With regards to Pronto, are the lyrics all you?
Yeah. That was definitely my first real crack at trying to write some lyrics that were genuine. I’d been playing instrumental music for so long and I’d always loved instrumental music and I kind of gravitated towards that. I thought that it was nice to get out of the safety zone of that. I imagine that I’ll look back on it as ‘Oh that was cute. I can’t believe you really wrote lyrics like that.’
Do you find yourself writing more since then?
It’s funny because I’ll write here or on tour or on a plane. Sometimes I’ll get ideas or it’s just writing down a bunch of observations or strange personal interactions I witnessed. When we play at the space, we set up all the recording equipment and just record and forget it’s running and just begin playing and improvising. And then something will take form and then we’ll learn how to play it and then I’ll put my notebook up on the music stand and start flipping through pages. And whatever’s on the page I’ll start singing over what we’re playing. Sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn’t.
How hard is it to change up from being on tour with Wilco and then going on tour with Pronto?
It is kind of a comedown or whatever. I have such a different level of investment with Pronto. Up until this point I’ve called the shots and it’s been my thing. I’ve been deeply involved in that in every aspect that I could be involved with. I’m welcoming all this work because with Wilco it’s completely taken care of by our management and our agents and our accountants and our roadies and all the people that work for the band. I’m always perpetually grateful. I may not say thank you every day, but I’m always grateful to the work that everybody does. For me this is a learning experience that goes beyond just the music making process. I’ve been having a great time being colossally busy taking care of this and having to make decisions and living and dying by them. It’s not a Herculean effort to get a proper show underway. As long as we continue to have fun and enjoy…because I think everyone loves to travel and play music. At this point it pays for itself and there’s a little bit of money after the fact. I’d like for it to get a little bit bigger and have it be something that people look forward to.
Pronto on WFMU
Mar 23rd
http://wfmu.org/playlists/shows/30767
Check here for the archive of the show!
Slug Magazine Reviews All Is Golden
Mar 15th
Pronto
All Is Golden
Street: 3.10
Contraphonic
Pronto = Badly Drawn Boy + Wilco + Amos Lee + Biirdie + French Toast + Sleepercar
Wilco’s Mikael Jorgensen, alongside members of Iron & Wine, Cat Power, Antibalas & Califone, form the indie-rock/pop group Pronto. Don’t write off Pronto as just another side project, though; their sound reaches out and grabs those ol’ eardrums to make them smile and itch for more. All Is Golden compromises 13 tracks of pop-sensibility indie-rock laden with soft-spoken-though-emotionally charged vocals, as well as soothing piano and guitar work. Tracks such as “Good Friends Have Gone,” “Had And Have,” “When I’m On The Rocks” and “Say It all Night” bring together Pronto’s mellow tendencies, while “I Think So,” “Monster” and “Unexpected Vex” are clearly a bit edgier and get the heart rate up a bit … but not too much. For a debut album from a band who is considered a part-time side project, Pronto exceeds all expectations – and would even without any name-dropping. – Jeremy C. Wilkins
Review Stalker hails All Is Golden
Mar 13th
http://reviewstalker.blogspot.com/2009/03/review-pronto-all-is-golden-today-and.html
Review Pronto All Is Golden today and always
The early description of 70′s icons like Randy Newman, Jackson Browne and Glen Frey come to mind when listening to Pronto’s debut All Is Golden. Under the analog edge is a indie band playing retro, sparse and working to let the core of the song bring it on home like a inspired yelling carpediem. No massive amounts of compression, comfortable sweaters, or studio trickery can fool the good song radar. The tracks are purposely sparse with just enough musical layers to keep it honest and golden. ha! In the middle of the record there is an attempt to get a little proggy in a AIR sort of way but it’s quickly abandoned for higher ground. This is all Mikael Jorgensen. Labeled as his solo project he is supported by long time friend and drummer Mr. Greg O’Keeffe and some other indie guys from Iron & Wine, Califone, and Antibalas as a the namedrop bio’s goes on. He could have picked up anybody in all honestly and I wouldn’t have noticed. The New Jersey roots are having played in Movere Workshop and Lizard Music. If this band would have come in 1978 nobody would have noticed but being that the time machine was fixed and have transported 30 years later. Their debut is much welcome in the emosoundscape and the mushrooming repeater stations. The music is proof positive that the art of song writing is alive and well and has not changed much since that time. You can even twitter them in the prontospere but no modern marketing tool gimic will change the connection the music makes all on it’s own. I’m not sure how access translates into live performances or music but what do i know. The couple sample tracks here are quite good cuts like a freshly poured beer. They refresh and numb the palette. There is hope for people who will take the the time to seek out music. Catch them live starting in March and thru out the spring of 2009.
Interview with Jim DeRogatis – Chicago Sun-Times
Mar 12th
http://blogs.suntimes.com/derogatis/2009/03/mikael_jorgensen_not_just_the.html
By
Jim DeRogatis
on March 12, 2009 1:44 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBacks (0)
Onstage as a member of Wilco, Mikael Jorgensen updates the role of Brian Eno in Roxy Music or Allen Ravenstine in Pere Ubu, twiddling the knobs of a synthesizer or manipulating sounds through a laptop computer.
Few knew that beneath that calm, scientific façade beat the romantic heart of a pop songwriter. Now, Jorgensen has bared that side of his musical personality on the debut album by his side project Pronto, “All Is Golden,” recently released on Chicago’s Contraphonic label.
“I’ve kind of been straddling that line my entire life,” Jorgensen says. “I got my first synthesizer when I was in seventh grade, and I’ve never been able to really figure out a way to merge that part of my music and the sort of classic-rock/pop songwriting I was into with my first band in New Jersey, Lizard Music. They’ve always sort of remained separate. ‘All is Golden’ is a reflection of experiences and learning and thinking about the music-making process in Wilco, but also incorporating musical ideas that were like, ‘I want to do this sort of ’70s, Steeley Dan-tinged stuff and take my first real crack at lyric writing.’”
Jorgensen cut his teeth in the fertile music scene around New Brunswick, N.J., in the mid-’90s. He moved to Chicago in 1998 to help John McEntire of Tortoise build SOMA Electronic Music Studios, and he joined Wilco to record the 2004 album “A Ghost Is Born.” He now lives in Brooklyn but returns here whenever Wilco summons.
“Around 2005, I thought, ‘I want to do something [outside of Wilco],’” Jorgensen says. “I was just kind of getting antsy in between tours, and I had all this personal upheaval going on: Both of my folks passed away in the course of a year, and there was a breakup with a girlfriend. I remember retreating to my apartment between tours and thinking, ‘I’ve just got to hoist myself out of this. I need another project to look forward to when I’m coming home.’ At the end of 2005, I played my first solo show ever at the Hideout, and then I made the decision that, ‘I’m going to make a solo record and just see where this goes.’”
Recording at Wilco’s famous North Side loft in the winter of 2006, Jorgensen recruited drummer Greg O’Keefe, bassist Matt Lux (Iron & Wine), guitarist Jim Becker (Califone) and saxophonist Stuart Bogie (Antibalas). (The touring version of Pronto is now completed by O’Keeffe, Erik Paparazzi and Tunde Oyewole). The result was a collection of 13 smart, emotional pop songs with an organic and intimate vibe that Jorgensen describes as “very ’70s.”
“I think the ’70s thing is just a byproduct of my upbringing: My dad worked in recording studios in the ’70s, and I would go and visit him and see all of the flashing lights and meters and people running around and music happening. I also think that it’s a result of the actual studio practice: This was a record about songs and playing together in the studio to get as much of that on tape as possible before bringing it into the computer for mixing and overdubs. I think that brings the sort of accessibility that we associate with the ’70s–like the Steeley Dan records and ‘Sail Away’ by Randy Newman, ‘Carney’ by Leon Russell or even a little weirder like Aphrodite’s Child’s ’666.’”
Now that “All Is Golden” finally has been released, Jorgensen is looking ahead to issuing an earlier recording by a different, more instrumental version of Pronto, as well as recording new material–in between touring commitments with Wilco, of course. And that brings up the inevitable question one must ask any songwriter who happens to be in a band with Jeff Tweedy: Is it daunting or inspiring to write your own material while working with someone on that level?
“It’s kind of both,” Jorgensen says, laughing. “We’ve just finished up the new [Wilco] record, and I think everybody is more excited about it at this point than ever. And I’m always sort of quietly dumbfounded and impressed with the fact that Jeff can just do something that… I don’t know if it’s all true, but it’s always honest, if you know what I mean, and the music that I love often has that quality.
“I try not to compare myself to Jeff, because it’s really not worth it. This is my first attempt at this, really, and I’m just trying to be as honest as I’m able.”
FACTS
Pronto, the Regal Standard
10 p.m. Saturday, March 28
Martyr’s, 3855 N. Lincoln
$12
(773) 404-9494; www.martyrslive.com
Even more Canadians like Pronto!
Mar 10th
Pronto
All Is Golden
By Ian Gormely
With the possible exception of Everclear’s God awful “AM Radio,” the brand of ’70s pop rotated on the lesser bandwidths has been relegated to side-projects in lieu of more “serious” retro pursuits. Like the Long Winters and the Minus 5 before them, Pronto are finding new value in that decade’s AOR pop fodder. The group are fronted by Wilco keyboard player Mikael Jorgensen, backed by members of Iron & Wine and Califone, amongst others. Despite Jorgensen’s position in Wilco, All Is Golden is a pleasantly balanced affair, mixing key lines with drums, bass and guitars. And the group do an admirable job of blending sweet ballads (“Had & Have”), rockers (“I Think So”) and pop genius (“When I’m On the Rocks”) into a cohesive sound. All Is Golden was recorded around the same time Wilco placed a pop sheen on Sky Blue Sky, so it remains uncertain if Pronto are the result of Jeff Tweedy’s influence on Jorgensen or vice versa. But the resulting product is proof positive that something good was going on in Chicago. (Contraphonic)
Review in Atlas & the Anchor
Mar 10th
Thursday, January 15, 2009
Pronto – “All Is Golden”
Pronto is the side project of Wilco keyboardist/multi-instrumentalist Mikael Jorgensen. In between his duties with Wilco and nearly two years after it was recorded, Pronto has finally put the finishing touches on “All Is Golden” and it will be released on Contraphonic Records on March 10th, 2009. Recorded in Chicago with help from Matt Lux of Iron & Wine’s touring band, Jim Becker of Califone and Greg O’Keeffe. Pronto involves an impressive cast of revolving members, which now includes, Mikael and O’Keeffe as well as Erik Paparazzi from Cat Power and Tunde Oyewole of Childballads.
Mikael and his band mates have created an engaging homage to AM radio and 70′s-era rock, with “All Is Golden”. Songs like “Precious Like A Sneer” sound like Randy Newman at his best and “Monster” has a power-pop crunch reminiscent of Cheap Trick or Todd Rundgren. “Listen Lover” bounces on a jangly, rattling riff over top of Mikael’s wry, bittersweet vocals. The laid back harmonies and varied instrumentation of “When I’m On The Rocks” sounds like it has been beamed to the future from an AM radio dial circa 1976.
Fans of Wilco’s last album, “Sky Blue Sky” will find similarities with Pronto’s “All Is Golden”, as both albums have an easy going, 70′s lite rock feel. “All Is Golden” will be released on CD and digital download March 10th, 2009 on Contraphonic Records.
Interview in Phawker.com
Mar 10th
SELECTED TRACKS NOW PLAYING ON PHAWKER RADIO!
BY JONATHAN VALANIA Mikael Jorgensen is the keyboard player for Wilco, who open for Neil Young Friday at the Spectrum (tix still available, yo). He’s the one in the Clark Kent glasses and untucked Oxford and Charlie Brown sweater combo, hunched over his MacBook and triggering disembodied sonic filigree and sine wave surrealism, like a mischievous child coloring outside the lines of Wilco’s horse-drawn Americana. Jorgensen — a Leonardo, New Jersey native who recently moved from Wilco’s HQ in Chicago to Brooklyn — first made Phawker’s acquaintance back in the mid-90s when he was a member of Lizard Music, and Phawker was a member of the Psyclone Rangers and both bands were on the World Domination label and going nowhere fast. Next thing you know — SHAZAM! — he’s playing keyboards in Wilco Version 2.0. In between, he has been nursing his obsession with early 70s AM radio pop with a revolving cast of collaborators (members of Iron & Wine, Cat Power, Califone and Antibalas) under the nom de rock Pronto, which just released the damn swell All Is Golden (Contraphonic).
PHAWKER: What, no mention of Lizard Music in your bio? It’s like it never happened. It’s like Stalin with Trotsky. It’s like the disappeared of Argentina! What’s up with that? That’s, like, a crime against humanity, especially what happened in Argentina.
MIKAEL JORGENSEN [pictured, right in red sweater]: OK, I cut my teeth on the mean New Jersey streets in a gleefully apoplectic pop band called
Lizard Music during the early part of the Clinton administration. At mid-winter all ages weekend matinee shows (in seaside bars that saw brisk business in the summer months), our Beatles cum XTC cum Captain Beefheart band was surrounded by scores of bands using sludgy guitars, tuneless yelling and shoe-in-the-dryer style drumming. We made a record. It made a little noise. If you’re lucky & dogged, you can still find them in places that also sell bric-a-brac. I left Lizard Music to form Movere Workshop in ‘96. This is where Greg O’Keeffe enters the picture, and we’ve been pals ever since, see?
PHAWKER: Listen, if they take you to the Hague, the best defense is to do like that dude from Serbia and stall for years on end until you die in jail. Genius, really. So what prompted the move to Brooklyn? (And by all means, enjoy it while you can. Not to keep harping on it, but this ‘crimes against humanity’ thing is pretty serious business.)
MIKAEL JORGENSEN: It’s like living on Sesame Street, complete with an actual, honest-to-god grouch that lives in the basement and hangs out by the trash. Instead of having a pet worm, this grouch has two disgusting pit-bulls and they share a studio garden apartment next to the boiler room while he complains relentlessly into a blue-tooth earpiece while sucking down Heinekins. Pronto mainstay and co-conspirator Greg O’Keeffe and I have a rehearsal/recording space in his favorite part of town, SLUMBO (or RAMBO depending on who you ask), where we toil on new Pronto material. I swear to god there are gypsies living in a mini-van with a camper trailer on the street outside our space. I hope to see their documentary on Current TV someday.What’s not to love?
PHAWKER: What is a typical day in the life of a guy in Wilco who lives in Brooklyn? Do you just ‘text it in,’ as the kids say? (In my day, we ‘faxed it in,’ but that’s another story.)
MIKAEL JORGENSEN: I spend a lot of time arguing with cabbies who always make a face when I tell them I’m going to Brooklyn from either the airport or late night East Village escapades. Then I rise, cook up some espresso based drinks – a “cup-of-chino” if you will, dice potatoes & whatever vegetables are laying around and make a frittata. Deal with email for a spell and then head down to our studio and work on Pronto music with Greg. Pick up the laundry and head home for dinner with my wife, friends and, when he’s around, Stephen Colbert.
PHAWKER: Do you ever get the feeling that Tweedy is sweating Pronto? Like he’s scheduling more Wilco shows just to keep you from Pronto?
MIKAEL JORGENSEN: No one knows this, but I actually wrote all of “A.M.” and Jeff has been stealing my songs ever since. I had to start a new band to put him off the trail, so thanks for blowing my cover. He’s totally gonna read this and now we’re done for.
PHAWKER: If Pronto had an arm wrestling contest with Autumn Defense, who would win? What about a wheel barrow race? Or would it all just devolve into an argument about the proper way to wear a scarf? In which case, who is right? I mean, people need to know that shit.
MIKAEL JORGENSEN: We would tie, but they would get a 1/4 point extra for style. The competition heats portion would be an exciting montage of Pronto beating the snot out of Gary Coleman, Gary Cole, Cole Porter, Porter Wagoner, Natalie Portman, Natalie Merchant, Stephen Merchant, Chan Marshall and Marshall Mathers.
PHAWKER: Do the other guys in Wilco ever complain that you get to sit down and play your laptop while they have to stand for the whole concert?
MIKAEL JORGENSEN: After every show, the guys are all, “I’m so tired from standing and playing my vintage instrument – made long before touch-tone technology with care and love by humans. Hey Mike, when are you gonna give us *our* chance to take it easy and Type-Along-With-Wilco?!” I grow ever so weary of these incessant laments.
PHAWKER: Do you ever check your email or surf for porn during a Wilco concert? C’mon, be honest!
MIKAEL JORGENSEN: I’m liveblogging every possible second of the show and the data gets submitted to a computer program that graphically interprets my posts and returns images like this:
PHAWKER: Yikes. That’s what Kings Of Leon is gonna look like if they don’t start taking care of themselves. Pronto reminds me of a band from the future that discovers 70s AM radio in a time capsule, and they like the way it makes them feel, and even though they can’t really relate to the words on the surface, they always feel better when they sing along. I mean that as a compliment.
MIKAEL JORGENSEN: Accurate. I grew up in a classic-rock-free household. A chance hearing of “Another Brick In The Wall” on someone else’s car radio was as close as I got to that world. I am a complete tourist to the mythical 70s AM radio stations. As a kid, I was listening to the records my Dad, who was a recording engineer, brought home after work. Most notably, he worked extensively with Bob James and recorded the theme to the TV show TAXI, the basketball theme on the soundtrack to the 1984 Olympic games (totally true) and many other records that have percolated through pop culture, mainly as samples utilized by hip-hop groups.
PHAWKER: “Good Friends Gone” is a real gem. That is not a question, it is a statement of fact.
MIKAEL JORGENSEN: Many thanks. We’re quite proud of her – she’s going on two and a half, almost three now.
PHAWKER: True or false: The new Randy Newman album is fucking excellent!
MIKAEL JORGENSEN: Firstly, I take offense to this Gotcha!-style journalism! Secondly, true. Thirdly, Randy is an obvious hero, and while listening to the record, see if you can figure out which of the songs is the secret Randy Newman tribute! In fact, you’ll need to buy two copies of the record and play them both at the same time, flip one out of phase, and thanks to Newton’s (1) Law of Common Mode Rejection, you’ll be able to hear super-secret messages! So be sure to camp out all night on March 9th, 2009 in front of your favorite, finer record store with enough cash to buy yourself a pair. Then prepare for utter rapture and bragging rights that should last well past the anniversary of the discovery of Uranus (March 13th, 1781).
(1) Not to be confused with Sir Isaac Newton. Commonly attributed to Myron Thaddeus Newton (2), Lafayette, IN, [1912-1975]
(2) Doesn’t actually exist. Don’t bother the Newton heirs, they’re innocent pawns in this sad game.
Nice review in Neufutur.com
Mar 9th
Pronto – All is Golden (CD)
Those expecting Wilco keyboardist Mikael Jorgensen’s side project to play the same alt-country indie rock his full time group is known for may be in for a disappointment. Rather the Jorgensen-fronted Pronto sticks to a brilliant combination of classic AM radio pop with a healthy dose of lyrical cynicism. All is Golden, 13 tracks of truly imaginative rock music, was actually recorded in 2006 with members of Iron & Wine and Califone.
As if that lineup weren’t enough to excite the indie kids, the band’s current roster also includes members of Cat Power and Childballads. With strong harmonies, plenty of piano, guitars and occasionally a few horns, Pronto’s influences stretch back to 70’s rock; the songs “Precious Like a Sneer” could easily have been written by Randy Newman or Warren Zevon. The bare bones “Good Friends Have Gone” showcases Jorgensen’s no-frills vocals best, but just about any song of the album is destined to win over skeptics. It may not be Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, Pt. II, but Pronto’s debut is just as impressive.
Top Tracks: “Good Friends Have Gone” and “Precious Like a Sneer”
Rating: 8.5 out of 10.
Pronto – All is Golden (CD) / 2009 Contraphonic /13 tracks
Canadians dig Pronto too!
Mar 9th
THE SWEDE SIDE OF WILCO
Since joining Wilco during sessions for 2004’s A Ghost Is Born, keyboardist Mikael Jorgenson has watched his fellow bandmates fit in their own projects in the brief breaks between Tweedy time. After squeezing in sessions here and there, Jorgenson — a long-time engineer and studio student — assembled his team at Chicago’s SOMA studios last year and finished the recording. The result is Pronto. The four-piece band — which releases its debut album, All Is Golden on March 10 — features the pianist’s vast skills at songwriting and arranging and is easily the most melodic and interesting pop record of the Wilco side projects to date. With a ‘70s feel that moves from emotional Randy Newman-esque confessionals to mid-tempo exercises that harken back to vintage rock-country sounds of Poco and America, All Is Golden is a great listen. The band will do a short east coast tour in March that finds them opening for Tweedy at the Higher Ground in Burlington, Vermont March 26.
Altsounds.com review of "All Is Golden"
Mar 9th
Pronto – All Is Golden
Contraphonic – Out March 10th
February 25, 2009, 02:05 PM
Mickael [sic] Jorgensen is maybe better known for his work with Wilco but if the songs on this debut album ‘All Is Golden’ under the moniker Pronto is anything to go by then there will soon come a time when Wilco will be a secondary recognition as ‘All Is Golden’ is bright shining star of a pop album that melds together the tuneful melodious-ness of the finest pop tracks with a subtle blend of jazz, funk, and various other musical incarnations that are hard to pin down.
For a little bit of background on Pronto click here as I’m just going to tuck into ‘All Is Golden’ and lay it out a little for you.
Opening with ‘Listen Lover’ coming across like My Morning Jacket jamming with Graham Coxon as the guitar scratches it’s way across a two-and-a-half minute jaunt through Californian pop. Title track ‘All Is Golden’ welcomes in the more jazzy moments with horns blasting over a funky almost Stevie Wonder-esque groove yet the whole thing is incredibly laid back as Jorgensen delivers a vocal that’s almost spoken but with a little more emphasis “Well once we were so beautiful, and the cracks were very small/Now things aren’t as clean as we hoped they would be”.
The piano-led ‘Good Friends Are Gone’ is as close in comparison to ‘The Weight’ by The Band that I have previously heard, ‘When I’m On The Rocks’ again aims straight for that 70′s sound that was so successful for The Eagles and Fleetwood Mac it’s that almost solely American of sounds despite midway turning into some sort of Robin Hood era chime but generally this is 70′s pop/rock and it’s quite refreshing somehow.
‘Precious Like A Sneer’ has the most quality of opening lines in “Hello there asshole/Or is it Mr. now” clearly a bitter riposte at somehow with ideas above their station, ‘Monster’ brings the guitars back in for a driving scuzz-rock track that has a quality thudding drum part before we are brought back to MOR with the almost recognisable (it’s like a misplaced theme tune to an American sitcom with maybe Bill Cosby) ‘What Do You Know About You?’ – I know I’m going to be humming it for awhile now anyway.
There’s a line running through ‘All Is Golden’ that veers of in several tangents with the far more heavy influenced moments like ‘Monster’ and ‘Unexpected Vex’ possibly courtesy of Russ Arbuthnot (Steve Albini alumni) which are then tempered by the other strands of quiet reflection such as ‘Big Sleeved Man’ and ‘Say It All Night’ that are fine pop moments that are set to a mellow soundtrack. And again things alter as the instrumental ‘Mrs. Bruford’ has an almost out-of-body atmosphere in it’s intro before the staple piano filters in and again the funk arrives it’s a quixotic blend.
‘Had and Have’ is once again a slow number that features a quietly strummed melody it’s clearly meant as a love song or at least an ode to a loved one with lines like “Where is she going/I know it’s far away/But the love we’ve had and have/Never goes away”. Whilst ‘I Think So’ is a wonderful jam of horns/guitars/piano all set to something out an 80′s buddy cop movie theme.
That’s bizarrely the overall impression I’m left with is that ‘All Is Golden’ is cobbled together from parts of the best theme-tunes and moments of Americana over the years and all blitzed in with each other. Mikael Jorgensen has made a fine album that brings together some very reminiscent moments, I would certainly consider going part-time in the day job.
Welcome!
Mar 8th
We are now just about fully moved in to Prontosphere.com. It’s been a long time coming and big thanks to Jim and Greg for making it happen!
Our debut record, “All Is Golden” will be released on March 10th to finer record stores, iTunes, and through our label Contraphonic.com. We’ll be touring this spring in fits and starts, so stay tuned for late breaking tour dates.
We hope you’ll check back, subscribe to our tour RSS feed, follow us on Twitter and say hello at the shows!
Until then…
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Pronto on WFMU – A Homecoming!
Mar 8th
Pronto pal, Bethany Ryker has invited Pronto to play on her radio show, The Stochastic Hit Parade on the venerable New Jersey, freeform, listener supported radio station, WFMU!
Tune in on Sunday March 22nd, 10pm-12am for exclusive live tracks by us!
I used engineer sound for the live music show “The Stork Club” back in the mid-late 90s. One of the shows I helped out with is archived here.
Also, I DJ’ed a “Listener Hour” that you can still listen to on the extensive ‘FMU archive.
Take it easy!
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