SOUNDTRACK: MOXY FRÜVOUS-Wood (1995).

Moxy Früvous is a band that can totally be judged by their covers. Their first album had a cartoon animal dog thingy, and the disc was whimsical and fun. Wood, their second disc shows the quartet in an autumnal scene covered in sweaters. And the content is autumnal and snug. There’s very little whimsy on the disc. It’s as if they fully matured in two short years.
I would say that this is my least favorite of the MF discs. However, it also contains my all-time favorite MF song: “Fly” so I can’t dismiss it entirely.
In fact, the first 5 or so songs are all really enjoyable. I find myself singing “horseshoes have got to be tossed” (from “Horsehoes”) all the time for some reason. And then we get “Fly.” It starts out simply enough with an acoustic guitar, but as it builds and the harmonies come in, “we’ll take a last flight you and I….Hold on tight” it’s amazing every time.
“Present Tense Tureen” is similar to the Bargainville style of wit, although it is banjo infused folk rather than pop. And “Poor Mary Lane” has a Beatlesque stomp going on.
From there the album sort of drifts into pretty, fairly undistinguished folk songs. “Nuits in Rêve” is a 6 minute folk ballad in French. It’s very pretty, although I don’t know what it’s about. Finally, the last song “Sad Today” wakes the disc up somewhat, as it feels likes something of a drunken shanty. There’s also a bonus track called “Organ Grinder” (I suppose) that is the funnest, craziest thing on the disc and feels like pure insanity compared to the rest. It’s a big shit-stompin’ song.
So as I say, the disc is quite different from the first. It even feels a little claustrophobic in the production which is something I don’t really notice. I’m not sure why the band left out their fun songs, maybe so they wouldn’t be pegged a novelty act, but they are sorely missed.
(It’s also likely why they release b shortly afterward).
[READ: June 24, 2009] “The Nerve”
This is the second short story in The Walrus‘ Short Story issue. This one is labeled as Romance genre, and yet it also transcends the genre and is more about a man falling in love than any of the other romance tropes.
Theo’s son died recently. The son’s friend returns home to Montreal to whisk the father away for some business (the father works in the same field as the friend, and this is a chance for the friend to do something nice). When they arrive at the friend’s house, it turns out that the woman in the apartment below him is a beautiful woman who also cooks traditional Kosher food. Theo falls for her instantly.
They know it cannot work out as, at the very least, they live half a continent apart, yet they fall hard for each other. It is a sweet and tender story with a hopeful yet undeniably sad conclusion.
For easier searching I’m also adding this spelling: Moxy Fruvous.

Leave a comment