Mux Mool's Planet High School Out Digitally Today on Ghostly International, Streaming via The FADER

Upcoming West Coast Dates, SXSW, and Expanded East Coast Tour Dates with Shigeto Announced

 

STREAM: Planet High School via Soundcloud / via IMPOSE / via The FADER
DOWNLOAD: "Raw Gore" direct mp3 / via Stereogum
DOWNLOAD: "Palace Chalice" direct mp3 / via Pitchfork

For Mux Mool, known to the government as Brian Lindgren, all his music connects to a certain outlook on life—basically, that the pre-established trajectory for adult life is being completely reimagined. This is the backdrop for Planet High School, out digitally today and physically March 6th, 2012 on Ghostly International. With "Raw Gore" and "Palace Chalice" offering up some early looks from the Brooklyn-based beatmaker's new album over the last couple months, The FADER premiered the full length album stream in all its glory, which you can also catch over at Impose as well. People both on the west coast and the east coast will have a chance to see Mux Mool do his thing live, including a handful of dates on both coasts with labelmate Shigeto, SXSW in Austin, and a March date with Sepalcure and Machinedrum. See below for the full list of upcoming tour dates.
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Click Here  for Planet High School Promo Video Starring Mux Mool

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MUX MOOL - UPCOMING LIVE DATES
Feb 11 - Seattle, WA - Chop Suey
Feb 16 - Denver, CO - Cervantes
Feb 17 - San Francisco, CA - 1015 Folsom w/ Shigeto
Feb 18 - Missoula, MT - The Palace Theatre w/ Shigeto
Feb 25 - Amherst, MA - Hampshire College w/ Shigeto
Feb 29 - Boston, MA - Wonderbar w/ Shigeto
Mar 1 - Burlington, VT - Metronome w/ Shigeto
Mar 2 - Buffalo, NY - Soundlab  w/ Shigeto
Mar 9 - Lincoln, NE - The Granada Theatre
Mar 14 - SXSW - Ghostly Showcase
Mar 15 - SXSW - Surefire Showcase
Mar 30 - University of Pennsylvania w/ Sepalcure, Machinedrum
May 5 - Cambridge, MA - M.I.T. Campus
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More info on Mux Mool:

Despite being accused as anti-human, repetitive, soulless, whatever, electronic music attracts the more devoted of idealists--the vinyl purist, the underground hero, the anonymous producer, etc.  He explains the concept behind his new album this way: “Today, young Americans have very little to look forward to except endless war, endless debt, no Social Security, and [the fact that] none of us can live without the constant fear of poverty. We don't need to have big houses and cars and a nest egg to get along. There's nothing that says you can't rent an apartment your whole life and not be happy.”

Lindgren’s life in music began in Minnesota with a cheap toy sampling keyboard (“I remember being so fascinated by how much a sound changed when you dropped it down several octaves”). Flash forward a few years (and more than a few keyboards), and the teenage Lindgren began recreating his favorite sounds – Dilla’s stutter-step beats, classic video-game music, abstract electronic noise – using software and digital effects, glazing them with tape hiss and vinyl static. Mux Mool’s 2010 full-length debut, Skulltaste, is the culmination of years of toil and experimentation, gathering Lindgren’s myriad talents and obsessions into one gloriously sprawling document.

So, how does this newfound economic ambivalence translate to an album of what is best (if not entirely) described as fluid, subsuming instrumental hip-hop? Hard to say. Planet High School certainly sounds different than Skulltaste. It’s funkier, more confident. It sounds less like someone trying to prove a point by arguing and more like someone trying to prove a point by just being who they are. It’s leading by example, sonically speaking.  Songs like the delirious rumble of “The Butterfly Technique” and “Live At 7-11”—which, by the way, resembles golden-era G-funk as filtered through an abused video game console and old breakbeat records—see Mux Mool enjoying the perch from which he sits. He knows what he’s good at, and the confidence shows. And there’s still some of that familiar, manic, video game-esque stutter in the album’s second half, specifically on synapse-tingling beat binges like “Cash 4 Gold” and “Get Yer Alphabets (Guns).”

As for where he got the name Mux Mool? Lindgren offers up an oddly telling story: he was dubbed Mux Mool by a band he admired, after he posted a blog on MySpace soliciting fans to submit names for his project. “Mux is short for ‘multiplexing,’ which is the streaming of many types of information through one channel,” he explains, “and Chac-Mool is an ancient Meso-American statue of a reclining man.” A technologically complex breed of synthesis and a timeless piece of indigenous art. Sounds about right.
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Mux Mool - Planet High School
Out Now Digitally, Out 3/6/12 Physically on Ghostly International

Tracklist:
Brothers
Live at 7-11
Palace Chalice
I Ruin Everything
The Butterfly Technique
Hand On the Scantron
Raw Gore
Cash 4 Gold
Get Yer Alphabets (Guns)
Baba

Mux Mool Press Page
Mux Mool Artist Page via Ghostly

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