On June 4th, 2003, Gabriel left the comfort of his city home to embark on a horrible journey of his own design. Along with his compatriots, Adam Scotto, and Malcolm Felder, Gabriel would brace the deep forest of Connecticut on a quest for truth, purity, and spiritual wholeness. The plan: compose and record an album of music and musings over a three-day camping trip, using only what instruments and battery-operated devices they could fit into the trunk of Malcolm’s 1989 Chevy Caprice Classic. What happened may shock, disturb, or confuse you, but it can’t be ignored. (Though we try.) It is a story unlike any other. A story of the unrelenting torment of Mother Nature, claustrophobic delirium, artistic delusions, non-conformist eating habits, and the occasional triumph of the human spirit.
So visit the site, download songs as you read the adventure, or just download the entire album.
How to Tell the Living from the Dead
It is a life condensed into a slim volume in which the heartache that oozes from off every page is as much the author’s individual pain, as it is the reader’s indecision concerning his or her own purpose in reading this book. It was begun when I was only nineteen and conveys much of that adolescence frenetic need to know intermingled with the accompanying stillborn cynicism. There are those who find this to be a poetic and dense thing they pore through in an effort to discover some kernel of meaning within the extended descriptions of minute physical action. It was an effort to make the nonreal real, to push myself into an internal world more snug than the larger insecure world of everyday reality. It involves a man name of Reginald and his son Frank, and how little they understand each other, a man was born with his arms far apart and a space where his body should have been, and a son he abandoned when the child was no more than four come to find him again, and a never-ending stream of memories caught in frustrating little soundbites so that the moment vanishes just as that definitive line would’ve explained it all was about to be spoken.
Paperback Book
8.5" x 5.5"
143 Pages
$12.00
Now Available
The Textbook Tapes
This recording project, based on the classic work by Colin Jacks, The Manikin Textbook, also released by this publishing company in the larger collection, A Survey of My Failures This Far.
(An excerpt from the original liner notes below.)
I was sitting in a midtown cafe with these two chameleons in shark-skin. At least that’s how I saw them at the time, tired from years of broken dreams and shattered hopes, but as they spoke this initial impression erased itself from my forebrain and found me gawking at their open maws. They were gonna turn my book into music, make the words into nodes and lick them. That’s what they said. To create harmony out of the giggling whiplash I’d experienced some twenty years previous.
As I saw it, the words themselves were whole. They were large buttons you press when you can’t sleep at night. But these guys wanted to turn it into butter and pour it into people’s ears. I sat down. They sat down. We gathered round the half-sized pianette in the corner of Gabe’s Manhattan townhouse and Mal brought on the charm in the form of a B#.
But I jest. I really have no idea what key it was, but whatever it was it made me forget all the years I’d sacrificed to the sentences inching along like soldiers across my field of vision. The years huddled next to the stove with the pot boiling overhead, filled with a mixture of calamari, olives, chives, and ketchup. Thinking, “Tea… Ketchup… Tea. Ketchup.“ Tapping out the syllables on the kitchen floor.
I thought the book was terrible. It had no structure. No vision. No creative impetus, or natural force. It was, on the whole, a disaster. The year was 1976. I was working on the last chapter of The Manikin Textbook, and I was beginning to think that there were maybe two paragraphs out of the last forty chapters that made sense, that I’d have to re-write them all. Then it came to me.
The book was not some paltry attempt to grab the reader’s attention and turn it into cash. It was a visionary quest. I was a zulu warrior walking head-on into the den of the lion and I had to strangle my own convictions before firing through this thing and coming out like a shot in the dark on the other side. I left for Vermont the following morning.
My uncle had a cabin there, and let me move in for a few of the colder months of the year. I brought Dorothy with me. My chimpanzee. I wrote daily and constantly. My fingers clacked at the typewriter with the wild abandon of a forest on fire or an astronaut in the womb of the universe. I took off and touched down on a moment to moment basis, sharing a beer with Dorothy. That crazy chimp loved beer.
The day I finally finished the book started out in the hammock we kept on the porch. I was bundled up in six layers of flannel and two sleeping bags. Dorothy had stolen the bed again. I woke to her out front. I hoped up, slipped the sleeping bags from my emaciated form, and followed her towards the woodshed. We were intercepted by a dove-tail fawn, who seemed to be just waking herself.
The fawn was innocence in fur. Dorothy approached it. She held out her hand to the fawn, her hand full with the granola she’d stolen from my rucksack, and the fawn approached nervously. In my decaffeinated state, I was honestly touched by this moment of primate selflessness. Then, just as the fawn was within a nose of Dorothy, the chimp leapt back and with a maniacal cackle taunted the fawn with its jangling hand. It repeated this several times, and I have to say I found myself laughing as well.
Then my laughter turned to self-loathing. Myself and that chimp were both mocking nature. She was Johnny Carson and I was her viewing audience. In that single moment all of my book is summed up, and it was then the final line came to me.
But back to the townhouse, and Mal and his B#. I had met them a week earlier when they explained the concept. I guess in those lost and troubled years after its completion, the book had developed a small following of fans, spread across America, and beyond. It seemed preposterous, but Mal assured me that he had grown up with the book always at the ready, and now that he is a major player in the American music industry he had the wherewithal to fulfill his “dream“ of setting the novel to music.
(An excerpt from the liner notes by Colin Jacks)
All songs written by Gabriel Boyer and Malcolm Felder
Recorded in Queens, NY
Production by Kevin Micka and Malcolm Felder
1. Cadillac Song
2. Fugitive Whore
3. Frozen Midkiss
4. Wormdog
5. Fleshly Expansion
6. History
7. Manikin Textbooks
8. Classroom
9. Solarium
10. Gernomer
11. Cotton Undergarments
12. Circular Room
13. Live Broadcast
14. Metal Teeth
Digital album available to stream or download now!
Manifesto I
Various Authors
It began as a class. Zach and I were teaching a class on manifesto-writing. In the course of preparing for that class I fell in love with the style of the manifesto, and we agreed to put out a collection of manifestos culled both from the web and any persons could be cornered in a dark room to state in short declarative sentences their beliefs. Some of the texts contained in this book are beautiful manifestos of a nihilist variety, such as Manifesto of Negativity by Harry Polkinhorn, Society of the Future by Larthom Spirochete, or Performance Indoctrination Model by Ray Langenbach, while others play with the form of the manifesto itself, such as Meg Rotzel’s Declaration of Meg or Manifesto 72-B by Crimethinc., though quite a few are heartfelt expressions of a desire for change, such as The Culture of the Real by Sean Micka, The Wild Ranch Manifesto by Tim Haugen, FRICMT by Jonah Rapino, and Manifesto for a New Instrumentation by Jason Sanford.
Paperback Book
5" x 7.5"
91 Pages
$10.00
Out of Print
A Journey to… Happiness Island
‘A Journey to Happiness Island’ was recorded in a weekend. The product of years of conniving on the part of Malcolm Felder, this album was recorded some eight years ago, released on green vinyl through Mutable Press and Mister Records, and is just now being made available digitally to fans everywhere from Cairo to Vladivostok.
Malcolm had envisioned Happiness Island as not so much a parody of children’s music, but rather an exploration of the style of production that goes into the creation of a children’s album. It follows Mr. Tadpole as he leads Billy, Mr. Jeebee, the Sunflower Cabaret, and Mr. Chipmunkee to Happiness Island. The story is narrated by Dr. Esophagus, a dermatologist. We go everywhere we can think of, from in to out, from up to down, from playful banging to electronic ooze, all in one scatalogical adventure into a yesteryear that never was. All else can be said concerning the story is that things get worse only to get better. Happiness Island isn’t Sappiness Island, anymore.
18 tracks recorded in Brooklyn, NY in Dec of 2000
All songs written by Gabriel Boyer and Malcolm Felder
Engineered by Kevin Micka
Produced by Malcolm Felder
1. Introduction
2. The Eating Song
3. Sunflower Theme
4. Chipmunkee
5. Quantum Mechanics
6. Octopus at the Piano
7. Story of the Island)
8. Free Association
9. The Chase
10. Damaged Spleen
11. Happiness City
12. Fuzzy Feelings
13. The Million Year Song
14. Nostalgia
15. Set Your Sights
16. Burger Army Theme
17. Clobbermeisters Theme
18. Happiness
Green vinyl LP and digital album available to stream or download at link below.
Normal Feelings
Because so many of the albums released by Mutable Sound are concept albums by bands that existed solely to create the product, Normal Feelings was formed so as to bring this music to a wider audience. In short, Normal Feelings began as a tribute band to the music of the Thousand Eyes, the Liszts, and Betamale, but Normal Feelings has now evolved into a loose group of musicians working together to develop new sounds and new songs. Most recently, Normal Feelings and Mutable author Gabriel Chad Boyer have worked together to write, produce, and release their first album, No Place to Die, out now through Mutable Sound.
People who are currently involved in Normal Feelings include, Gabriel Boyer, Malcolm Felder, Jason Allen, Phil Arezzi, Piotr Wereszczyński, Alex Yoffe, Dan Katayama, Paul Medrano, and Michael Gorka.
Releases
About Mutable
It’s not easy to describe Mutable. We’ve been a label, a collective, a brand, and of course, we are none of these things because we are mutable. At it’s core, Mutable is the artists we love, and the world which they have created. It is paperbacks written by fresh new voices, transcendent home recordings, experimental theater in people’s homes, massive tomes of science fiction, pseudo-children’s albums on colored vinyl, performances in dark Vietnamese cafés. It’s a world that’s always shifting and expanding. Mutable.
Enjoymutable.com is your opportunity to engage with the Mutable world. Not only can you find news and information about your favorite Mutable artists, but it also sheds light on other work that inspires us, the inner thoughts that consume us, and puzzling cultural phenomena. Enjoymutable.com is also where you can support our family of artists by purchasing some of those products mentioned above. And finally, it is the place to enjoy a vast selection of online content created exclusively for enjoymutable.com. From short stories, to interviews, to radio plays, enjoymutable.com aims to provide you access to a seemingly endless library of original material. And, of course, we hope to continue to push the envelope of this medium to allow our artists to fully realize the potential of this digital canvas.
And what makes a Mutable artist? At first, it was just a tight knit group of creative friends (read about our history here) forming Mutable in an effort to find strength in numbers. As it grew, and more artists gravitated to us and found shade under our umbrella, a particular Mutable aesthetic began to reveal itself. Our work is unexpected, often absurd and irreverent, personal and uncompromising, informed equally by obscure texts and popular cinema, yet wholly original. And most importantly, this aesthetic is bound to change and mutate because the Mutable artist is restless, and we welcome this uncertainty.
Another way to look at it? As Mark Fisher writes in his unfinished ‘Acid communism’: “Instead of seeking to overcome capital, we should focus on what capital must always obstruct: the collective capacity to produce, care and enjoy.”
We are Mutable. Enjoy.
Submissions:
We’re always looking for more contributors to our site and artists to be part of our growing family. Please send any work or proposals to mail@mutablesound.com
Join us:
PERSONNEL
Gabriel Boyer
Gabriel Boyer has been a thorn in people’s thighs for some time now. He has been wandering in and out of the sitting rooms of his friends, has been hopping back and forth between Asia and New England and points between. He has occasionally released books and other paraphernalia of the mind. He has no sense of when any decent grifter would ostensibly throw in the towel and get a regular job as a button salesman, say.
Read MoreBeta Male
Beta Male is first and foremost a bunch of idiots in the woods. It is Adam Scotto, Gabriel Boyer, and Malcolm Felder. It is three days in the woods, complaining and occasionally recording. For those three days we were beta males, and the result is the album Battery Power.
Releases
The Mutable Story
Mutable Sound was originally Mutable Press, a company founded with Zachary Katz and the publication of a small book titled Seven Short Plays for the Bedroom. We had it printed at Kinko’s. We bound them ourselves using a saddle stitch on the floor of my bedroom at 180 Green Street where the plays themselves had been performed. We had discussed it in Brooklyn over eggs.
Read MoreHappiness Island
Happiness Island is an idea. It’s a place, but the sort of place you visited once in your dreams and then turned away from. Malcolm first got the idea from his forays into the children’s albums of yesteryear and spent over a year coaxing Gabriel to accept his particular aesthetic vision. Gabriel wrote Don’t Set Your Sights Too High, which was funny and brechtian, but also Boingo the Nihilist Bear, which went too far. Then, one Friday in December of 2000, Gabriel made his way down to New York, and the two of them discussed this project for the last time, and while listening to Malcolm’s extended collection, Gabriel finally began to understand. Malcolm put on his funniest voice and sang, ”People think that chipmunks got high voices, but they don’t,” and Gabriel burst into laughter.
The other musicians arrived the following day, and recording began. No one knew where to start. Then the various players had come down for this began improvising and Gabriel started improvising a song of his own. ”Happiness is wherever you are,” he sang. Their journey had begun.
Two days later, the recording finished, everyone returned to their former lives, and Malcolm began the arduous process of putting the pieces together to make this thing into something approached listenability. The songs had been recorded largely in chronological order, but there were pieces missing, and sounds and exposition to be added. It would be a year before his own journey was finished, and he brought it to Boston, to introduce A Journey to Happiness Island to persons might laugh and coo, or sputter in their confusion, but it existed all the same, and now years later perhaps now he can admit that his failure was a success all along.