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Mutemath

The members of MUTEMATH had reached their breaking point. Collectively gathered on the front porch of their New Orleans home-studio where they were struggling to record the follow up to their 2006 critically-acclaimed Teleprompt/ Warner Bros. debut, the quartet screamed at each other with the full weight of the accumulated frustrations that had escalated from weeks of fighting. To heighten the tension, a lawn mower droning in the background drowned out their voices, inciting them to yell even louder in misguided efforts to be heard.

Finally, drummer Darren King voiced what everyone was thinking, but feared saying out loud: either call it quits or swallow their individual pride and try to write the best songs they ever had. "No one said a word at that point," recalls vocalist/frontman Paul Meany. "And without comment, apology or agreeing, I just remember all of us walking right back inside, going straight to our instruments, and just starting to play music." That was the day King, Meany, guitarist Greg Hill, and bassist Roy Mitchell-Cárdenas began to write what would become Armistice.

But before that day would arrive, the band had written close to 16 songs in the midst of their 3 years on the road and had full intention of arriving in New Orleans to record and sculpt these ideas into the 10 or so songs they would need for their sophomore release. But after weeks of recording and working in every separate corner of an old uptown voodoo Victorian, the internal conflicts over what parts made up the best ideas began building to a full on creative stalemate. Growing exhausted with their crumbling democracy, the band started looking for an outside producer to evaluate the situation. One by one, they were flown in every other day for a week until they met Dennis Herring (Modest Mouse, Elvis Costello, The Hives).

"What caught our attention about Dennis was that he had the most simple, yet slightly offensive suggestion for us," says Meany about their first visit. Upon hearing what had been recorded so far Herring said, "Why don't you just try writing some new songs?"

"I'm surprised no one had really entertained that option up until then," Meany comments, "...perhaps because it seemed like too daunting of a task considering how invested we'd become in the existing ideas." But Herring continued to push his point, "You obviously aren't happy with what you have, and honestly, I don't think it's great either. Stop spinning your wheels; shelve these songs; and start spending your time writing together. Don't worry about recording your record right now. Just write it."

Taking a few days to think about it after Herring left, the band attempted a discussion on what to do next, but still could not come to any unanimous agreements until that noteworthy day on the front porch where all the conflict would come to a head.

"All of the constant fighting had left us unable to resolve anything," remembers Mitchell-Cárdenas. "But something special happened when we just decided to shut our mouths, pick up our instruments, and disregard anything we had written prior." Something began to align in the creative universe. Songs were forming on their own at a fast pace, almost as if their true sound was being discovered for the first time. It was in this moment that their first single "Spotlight" fell out of the sky.

Once the band had grasped the benefit of their new mindset, they didn't waste any more time. All previous 16 ideas were completely scrapped and the band began to work together in the same room everyday just starting with a tempo and key to play in. It turned into a marathon style writing session yielding a new song about every other day. The band eventually signed on Herring as their official producer and after 3 months in New Orleans shaping up almost 20 brand new songs, they headed to Oxford, MS and worked more closely with Herring to put the final details in place.

Fueled by the band's chaos and confusion, MUTEMATH has created a work of tremendous beauty and meaning on Armistice... via such tracks as the hypnotic, musically inventive "Clipping," the propulsive, high dynamic charge of "The Nerve," the quirky tribute to Murphy's Law "Backfire," and the nine-minute, soaring, closing opus "Burden." Instead of brushing aside the questions and anxiety that propelled the project's birth, the quartet embraces them, with each song questioning where to go from here.

Since MUTEMATH released its first EP in late 2004 and hit the road in 2005, their inherent nature has challenged limitations and expanded parameters. By the time of the 2006 self-titled debut, their blending of adverse genres into its own innovative sonically adventurous creation earned them a reputation as one of modern music's most daring young groups. By 2007, they would find themselves Grammy nominated and declared by Alternative Press as "the #1 band you need to see live before you die." But in the process of pushing boundaries even further for themselves, they almost pushed themselves out of existence. "It was a risk we had to take," says King looking back on what they set out to accomplish for Armistice. "This record was by far the most painful music-making experience I've ever had, but also the one I'm most proud of."

It's evident that this record is not a high-minded story with a beautiful resolve, but rather the experience of knowing when to stop fighting for the sake of progress. Without a doubt, ideals get mamed and dismembered in the scuffle, but Armistice emerges as a transcendent anesthetic to keep us singing and dancing through it all.

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