Andrew Bird

Andrew Bird

Getting Inside With His Feathers And Leaving A Yellow Glowing Glow Behind

Oct 29, 2007

Words by Sean Moller // Illustration by Johnnie Cluney // Sound Engineering by Patrick Stolley

There's a farmhouse somewhere out amongst the harvested, chewed up and spit out corn and soybean stalks and stems just an hour north of here, near the tri-state area of northwestern Illinois, where Iowa, Illinois and Wisconsin meet, with Andrew Bird's name on it. It's a place better left to the imagination. It sits, as far as anyone knows, in the general vicinity of Galena, a tiny little burg with a small river running through it and a once upon a time preponderance of Civil War generals calling it home. By the end of the war, nine of them lived in the city - including Ulysses S. Grant - and dinner guests and visitors such as Susan B. Anthony would pull into town in carriages, spending time in the valley, surrounded by massive, old trees.

Herman Melville lived there, a place where you can become - still to this day - invisible next to the handmade treats of the confectionaries, the wineries, the nonchalance, the bed and breakfasts, the Moleskine notebooks and the rural spacing. It's the place where Bird, the whistler, the philosopher, the magician, the man of mystery, should stake out a residency.

It should be where he buys his milk, hard boils his eggs, wiles his days and conceptualizes these songs of otherworldly opulence. It should be where he receives his mail. He should be sharing pithy comments with that mailman, on a sun-drenched porch, as he hands over the super saver coupons, energy bill and that week's New Yorker or something just as high brow, maybe our favorite, The Believer.

The homestead, as we believe it to be, has a detached garage, a pump house, a wide open lawn that would take an hour to push mow, some grandly hanging maple trees, a garden rife with caterpillars and rabbits, and a half mile to the next house. It should be on a gravel road, tucked so comfortably into the countryside, but it doesn't have to be. The house itself is probably warm, smells like burnt wood and feels as if you could be happy forever inside of it, never leaving, just reading the hardbound books on its shelves.

Bird and his music lend themselves to a myriad of postulations and elaborate ideas about where his music is first cradled and babied, where it's nursed and doctored. From all that can be determined through it, Bird belongs to no known stratum, but a subtext that isn't prone to easy answers. He does sneaky things with a violin and guitar. He can make his mouth and voice do impressive contortions, and all the while listening to him, you will find yourself not blinking or breathing much, just enough to get by until the next break in song.

He writes something funny below when he talks about the rural Midwest being a sleeper. He's kind of a sleeper himself, this one Andrew Bird. He makes songs that positively have wings on them - huge Big Bird wings - with massive wind-grabbing feathers that allow the songs to rise and rise and rise and then just glide down on the pockets of blue wind, just as the beady-eyed hawks do out along the road ditches near his home, looking to poach some slithery field mice below.

His latest album, Armchair Apocrypha, is all rubies and diamonds, pleasing in its cuts and refractions. It continues with his mission to make the smartest, most dressed up mists of shrewd lightning bolts - they strike you right in the temple and turn you all yellow on the inside, while leaving your outer sides the same as they always were. It's a better experience than the one that usually happens with a song, where the outside is all that's affected.

Click here to visit Andrew Bird's myspace page.

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  • So i really like this guy!

    dawkins.john | Wednesday, June 17, 2009 | 10:13 pm

  • beautiful. i love this man. i can't wait to see him at lollapalooza this summer.

    MaggieCarey | Thursday, June 11, 2009 | 7:28 pm

  • amazing Beautiful music!

    lulu10 | Wednesday, June 03, 2009 | 10:54 am

  • it seems to me that mr moller is describing a place that he imagines Andrew Bird living. Not a place that Andrew Bird actually does live in. and i love it. i want to live here! the portrait of the place seems to brilliantly describe how the music makes the author feel. in fact, i think that the author's line about a "subtext that isn't prone to easy answers" describes the writing as well as it describes the music. keep 'em coming, sean. and thanks.

    amc27 | Wednesday, April 22, 2009 | 12:05 pm

  • i love andrew bird so much! i was watching one of his performances on youtube and someone commented on his incredible whistling skills and i thought it was funny. although i have to agree!

    Anonymous | Tuesday, April 21, 2009 | 10:53 pm

  • I love Andrew Bird. He's got to be my favorite artist right now. His songs contain such meaning and the whistling is amazing.

    Mollylovesthemtunes | Tuesday, April 21, 2009 | 8:42 pm

  • He may write all of them,wow.

    Anonymous | Friday, April 17, 2009 | 9:41 pm

  • Well the writer Sean Moeller writes just about all of these articles for all of these sessions. Try not to be so ignorant down there.

    Anonymous | Friday, April 17, 2009 | 8:57 pm

  • His whistle almost simulates a theremin,delicate and beautiful music.

    Anonymous | Friday, April 17, 2009 | 8:54 pm

  • He really is amazing...

    Anonymous | Thursday, April 16, 2009 | 10:51 am

Songs by Andrew Bird

  1. first song

    Welcome to Daytrotter

  2. second song

    Fiery Crash

    Download Andrew Bird playing Fiery Crash

    - original version appears on Armchair Apocrypha

  3. third song

    Lull

    Download Andrew Bird playing Lull

    - original version appears on Weather Systems

  4. fourth song

    A Breaks B

    Download Andrew Bird playing A Breaks B

    - original version appears on Unreleased Dianogah songWell, it's a song that we worked on for a long time. Jay came up with his main part and we all really liked it and we went through many different ideas before ending up with a complete song. I started to say final, but I'm not sure it's totally done yet. I think we worked on it off and on for something like five years. Not that the result is a masterpiece...it just took a long time to come up with something that we felt was worthy of the original part Jay wrote. I'm still not sure that we did the part justice. Hopefully when we finally nail something down for the album it'll feel like we came up with something good. In regards to meanings...I'm not sure we ever try to ascribe our instrumental songs (which are most of our songs) with specific meaning. It's more about the feeling you get when you listen to it. Hopefully instrumental music can touch people the same way that songs with words can...at least that's the goal. The listener has to give it some meaning. It will be on our next album, which will be out on Southern Records in May of next year.

  5. fifth song

    Plasticities

    Download Andrew Bird playing Plasticities

    - original version appears on Armchair Apocrypha

  6. sixth song

    The Giant of Illinois

    - UnreleasedDownloads for *The Giant of Illinois* were capped at 2500.

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