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We just released a new split EP with DL Diedrich! It's available https://electricneedleroom.bandcamp.com/album/were-35-years-ahead-of-our-time" target="_blank">here.
It features one new original song from each of us and one cover of each other. I think Mr. Diedrich did a much better job with "Middle of the Ocean" than I did.
Enjoy!
-Matt
Electric Needle Room
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We have an announcement. If you hate reading, just watch our video we made about the announcement https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OqCSYAolzrE" target="_blank">here.
Basically, we are excited to announce we are releasing a new split EP with Pittsburgh's The Worsh Ahts called "Uplifting Songs for the Downtrodden Heart." As expected, these are positive songs to hopefully lift your spirits- three brand new tunes from us and three new tunes from The Worsh Ahts. It will be available on August 5th, but you can hear them already right now here.
The EP will be available on Bandcamp as "pay what you want," but it's important to note that 100 percent of the proceeds will be donated to the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline.
Thanks for taking the time to read this. I hope you're as swell has heck.
Love,
Matt
-Electric Needle Room
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It's called "It's Getting Personal," and I'm pretty excited about how it turned out. Believe it or not, this will be our seventh full-length release. People keep thinking we broke up years ago, but here we are, still releasing catchy songs about everything from Facebook to wearing clothes that don't match to spare kidneys.
The album will be available everywhere on Janurary 11th, but you can pre-order it and stream it already https://electricneedleroom.bandcamp.com/album/its-getting-personal" target="_blank">on Bandcamp.
I love you.
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Download now for $3 or wait until Presidents Day (February 18th) and get it for free!
http://electricneedleroom.bandcamp.com/album/the-presidents-of-the-united-states-of-america-volume-3
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Today is the official release date for our album "The Presidents of the United States of America (Volume 2)." You can download it for free or "name your price" on Bandcamp, through Itunes, through Amazon, or through CD Baby. The choice is yours.
In case you haven't kept up with Electric Needle Room, here's the description for this album:
By day, Matt Beat is a middle school social studies teacher. By night, the multi-instrumentalist writes and records songs about dead Presidents. Actual dead Presidents. Not the rap duo. He is recording them chronologically, and these songs are about Presidents 15-31, from Abraham Lincoln (I'm sure you've heard of him and like him) to Herbert Hoover (I'm sure you've heard of him and don't like him). Didn’t know anything about Chester Arthur? Now you do. These songs are educational and catchy.
I hope you enjoy these President songs. I'm currently working on FDR and Harry Truman, simultaneously.
Happy Presidents Day!
-Matt
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"The Colic Song" by Electric Needle Room
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http://inkkc.com/content/talkers-american-history-has-a-musical-champion/
American history has a musical champion
{ special to ink } brianne pfannenstiel
Most musicians sing about relationships, raging parties, love, life. But not Matt Beat.
Matt Beat sings about dead presidents.
Actual dead presidents. Like George Washington and Millard Fillmore.
His one-man band, Electric Needle Room (bonus points if you can name the “Simpsons” reference), recently released its album “The Presidents of the United States of America, Volume 1,” which recounts the lives of the first 15 U.S. presidents in order of their service.
With a poppy, synth sound matched to quirky lyrics, the songs are catchy — and educational.
The album starts with a rousing song called “George Washington”: “He never liked politics, never liked to play that game, but the new country needed a president, so they just forced him in.”
“It’s pretty dorky,” Beat said. “But it’s fun.”
The album mirrors Beat’s passion for history. When he’s not moonlighting as a musician, Beat teaches history at Blue Valley High School. He said he likes to keep his life as a rocker separate from his role as a teacher, but the two tend to intersect.
Like most teachers, Beat hoped his students wouldn’t Google his name. But like most students, they did and asked about his music in class. “You can’t hide,” he said. “They found my Twitter, too.”
During last period on a recent Friday, Beat tried to teach his world history class about the timeline of events in World War II through a Jeopardy-style trivia game. He read from Winston Churchill’s famous speech before the commons, hoping to rally his own troops. Of course, most of his students don’t find history as exciting as he does, especially on a Friday afternoon. One girl threw a pen at another’s head while a boy in the back closed his eyes in apparent weariness.
Unimpeded, Beat pushed through the lesson. At 29, he’s been teaching only about a year and half. The presidents project started long before, he said, when indie pop musician Sufjan Stevens announced his intent to write albums dedicated to each of the 50 U.S. states. “I saw that and I thought, ‘This is so cool. I want to do something like this,’ ” Beat said.
An obvious fit: Beat’s longstanding fascination with the presidents. He memorized them in order while in grade school.
“I was just fascinated that one person that was just kind of thrust into that position wasn’t necessarily that significant before,” he said.
Beat’s musical forays aren’t limited to analyzing commanders-in-chief. He has been writing music about all kinds of topics — the perils of high school, the necessity of dental hygiene — since middle school. A few years ago he teamed up with Paul Santos, creator of the Felt Show in Lawrence, to help write for Santos’ popular adult puppet show.
“His lyrics really just kind of stuck out and he seemed like somebody who has a good sense of humor,” Santos said.
Beat’s songs start as melodies recorded on his phone. He adds lyrics and instrumentation later with his laptop. Beat doesn’t perform much, but when he does, Santos said he’s good at engaging the audience.
“He’s a very lively performer,” Santos said. “I could see him performing in a room with five people and have the same energy as if he were playing in front of 500. He’s doing it because he believes in it.”
Quiz: Better know a president
Match the song lyrics to the president. (Answers in the box at right)
1. He died his second year in office / Of not poison but stomach flu. / He was too non-political. / Hey, isn’t that a good thing?
2. A military hero of the War of 1812 / Defied the odds in the Battle of New Orleans. / Invaded Spanish Florida, captured Pensacola / Was the first “common man” to win the presidency.
3. Who helped write the Declaration of Independence? Who negotiated a peace treaty with Britain? Who spent eight years behind Washington to learn the ropes? Who would someday get his own HBO TV show?
4. He was Virginia’s governor. / Built a mansion called Monticello. / He was a Renaissance man. / There wasn’t much he could not do.
5. Another dough face. Only President to never marry. / Elected five times to the House of Representatives. / Minister to Russia, a decade in the Senate. / and Secretary of State / in politics too long.
6. From Tennessee and a lawyer, he smelled just like Jackson. / Speaker of the House and governor, he hated taxes. / A dark horse candidate, his campaign stood for expansion. / He wanted Texas, Oregon, California — yeah all of it!
7. The Fox of Kinderhook / Played things by the book. / Opportunities, he took / And yes, he had the look.
Answers
1. Zachary Taylor. 2. Andrew Jackson. 3. John Adams. 4. Thomas Jefferson. 5. James Buchanan. 6. James Polk. 7. Martin Van Buren.
Read more: http://inkkc.com/content/talkers-american-history-has-a-musical-champion/#ixzz1M5B976wR
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Here is a wonderfully written article in the Blue Valley High School paper about Electric Needle Room. BVH student Emily Brown did a fantastic job!
Here you can see Electric Needle Room on TV on the Blue Valley High School TV station.
See, I told you they were famous...at Blue Valley High School!
Blue Valley's Tiger TV March 2011 from Tiger TV on Vimeo.
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Stupid questions
The Electric Needle Room tackles the presidency -- in song
By Luke X. Martin, Thu., Feb. 24 2011 @ 7:35AM
Chances are, you're not quite who you set out to be when you were in high school. Making it as a professional athlete takes more dedication and genetic predisposition than most people have, and those dreams of touring the country with your band are long gone.
But this is America: land of the free, home of the brave. A place where anyone can grow up to be president. Right?
The fact is, the U.S. presidency is one of the most elite and elusive clubs out there, with a total membership of exactly 43 in nearly 222 years. So, with his prospects for becoming the leader of the free world getting dimmer and dimmer by the day, Overland Park musician and part-time history teacher Matt Beat is doing the next best thing: He's writing a song about each president.
The Kansas native's band, Electric Needle Room, has been making quirky indie pop under one name or another since the mid-'90s. Their latest effort, The Presidents of the United States of America, Volume 1, is a lo-fi chronicling of the careers of the first 15 presidents. (Expect the second volume next year.)
"I've always been fascinated with presidents for some reason," Beat admitted recently during a phone interview. "I memorized the presidents in order when I was, like, 10," he said. "It was extremely dorky."
The same can be said of the new album, officially released on Presidents Day, Feb. 21 (go figure). It's filled with delightful melodies and easy-to-remember hooks that split the difference between Ween and the theme song to Home Movies with some synthesizer thrown in for good measure.
"The songs are really about the legacy of each president," Beat said, "the good things and the bad things." He means that literally. Can't seem to remember who the last Whig president was, or which was the first to be born an American citizen? Look no further than "Millard Fillmore," a bouncy summer jam, and the delicate "Martin Van Buren," respectively. The album might be the perfect companion to your next game of Trivial Pursuit.
Despite the esoteric subject matter and the obviously low recording budget, if not taken too seriously, The Presidents of the United States of America is intensely accessible. The album runs the gamut, from the straight-up indie-pop opener "George Washington" to the synth-heavy "Thomas Jefferson."
Ultimately, the album is a labor of love. "It's something I've always wanted to do, I just now got around to doing it," Beat said. As for his own presidential aspirations, Beat seems to have put them on hold. For now, he'll stick to what he does best: making smart, slightly off-center pop music.
Download the album here for free.
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Get it here on Bandcamp, and pay whatever you want for it. You can have it for free, or you can have it for $1 million, but nothing in between! Just kidding! But I wasn't kidding about downloading it! Download it now!
Here's a nice review of the album...
http://lukexmartin.tumblr.com/post/3384715160/enrpotus1
Chances are you’re not quite who you set out to be when you were in high school. Making it as a professional athlete takes more dedication and genetic predisposition than most people have and those dreams of touring the country with your band are long gone.
But this is America, land of the free, home of the brave. A place where anyone can grow up to be president. Right?
The fact is, the U.S. presidency is one of the most elite and elusive clubs out there, with a total membership of exactly 43 in nearly 222 years. So, with his prospects for becoming the leader of the free world getting dimmer and dimmer by the day, Overland Park musician and part-time history teacher Matt Beat is doing the next best thing; He’s writing a song about each president.
The Kansas-native’s band, Electric Needle Room, has been making quirky indie pop under one name or another since the mid-90s. The latest effort, “The Presidents of the United States of America, Volume 1,” is a lo-fi chronicling of the careers of the first 15 presidents (expect a second volume next year).
“I’ve always been fascinated with presidents for some reason,” Beat admitted recently during a phone interview. “I memorized the presidents in order when I was like ten,” he said. “It was extremely dorky.”
The same can be said of the new album, which will be officially released on Presidents Day, Feb. 21 — go figure. It’s filled with delightful melodies and easy-to-remember hooks that split the difference between Ween and the “Home Movies” theme song with some synthesizer thrown in for good measure.
“The songs are really about the legacy of each president,” Beat said, “the good things and the bad things,” and he means that literally. Can’t seem to remember who the last Whig president was, or which was the first to be born an American citizen? Look no further than “Millard Fillmore,” a bouncy summer jam (and my personal favorite), and the delicate “Martin Van Buren,” respectively. The album might just be the perfect companion to your next game of Trivial Pursuit.
Despite the esoteric subject matter and the obviously low recording budget, if not taken too seriously, “The Presidents of the United States of America” is intensely accessible. The album runs the gamut, from the straight-up indie-pop opener “George Washington” to the synth-heavy “Thomas Jefferson.”
Ultimately, the album is a labor of love. “It’s something I’ve always wanted to do, I just now got around to doing it,” Beat said. As for his own presidential aspirations, Beat seems to have put them on hold. For now, he’ll stick to what he does best; making smart, slightly off-center pop music.
You can catch Electric Needle Room at 7p tonight at the Black Dog Coffeehouse in Lenexa, or check out the official CD release show on Feb. 21, at The Riot Room. Cover is $5 and includes a copy of “The Presidents of the United States of America, Volume 1.” You can also download the album from ENR’s bandcamp website.