Showing posts with label news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label news. Show all posts

Sunday, May 11, 2008

Vending Machine Mention in Outside Magazine, June 2008

Our friend Jonathan Kiersky at the Hi-Tone Cafe put "Desert Sun Played" on his summer mix. Check out the side bar below from Outside Magazine's June 2008 issue.

The perfect party mix...doesn't exist. But some people know better than others. And few can be trusted more than the folks at the Hi-Tone Cafe, in barbacue capital Memphis, Tennessee. The pizza joint hosts about 1,000 bands for 300 shows a year--both local and national touring acts. "If a tremendous band is playing rooms our size," says owner Jonathan Kiersky (who suggests the rootsy starter mix here), "they will be playing the Hi-Tone."

1. "Honey, I'm Too Old for You" Jack-O and the Tennessee Tearjerkers
2. "Push and Pull," Viva L'American Death Ray Music
3. "T New," Antenna Shoes
4. "Desert Sun Played," Vending Machine [Buy on iTunes]
5. "Is There a Ghost," Band of Horses
6. "So Much Trouble," Matt Pond PA
7. "Ugly Things," Unknown Hinson
8. "The Cry of Melora," Black CObra
9. "Last Day of Winter," Pelican
10. "Veni Vidi Vici," Black Lips

Tuesday, March 04, 2008

Memphis Flyer and Commercial Appeal Top 10 lists

Hey - this is kinda old news, but King Cobras Do made a couple of year end lists. Check it:

Memphis Flyer:
2. King Cobras Do — Vending Machine (Shoulder Tap): Where so much indie rock this year (ha — "this year") felt insular, Robby "Vending Machine" Grant's King Cobras Do is instead cozy. It's a home-recorded gem that takes domestic intimacy as its great subject: His son contributes free-associative lyrics; his toddler daughter is the subject of the delicate "Tell Me the Truth and I'll Stop Teasing You"; his wife gets a tribute on "Rae" that includes images of "dancing in the den" and memories that are palpably lived-in ("Remember when our room was just a bed?"). Even the house itself gets into the act with "Good Old Upstairs," a song about the attic studio where King Cobras Do was created. -I
Read the rest of the top 10 - Memphis Flyer

Commercial Appeal:
5. Vending Machine, King Cobras Do (Shoulder Tap): Memphis music scene mainstay Robby Grant (Big Ass Truck, Mouserocket) delivers his fifth solo effort under the Vending Machine moniker, and it proves his most entertaining exercise in left-field pop yet. A charmed collision of styles and sounds, its 12 tracks refract everything from '50s doo-wop to early '80s Australian pop through Grant's skewed kaleidoscope. - Bob Mehr
Read the rest of the top 10 - Commerical Appeal

Sunday, January 13, 2008

Memphis Pops Video

Check out this short video from last year's Memphis Pops fest:

Check out this video: Memphis Pops 2007

Sunday, December 02, 2007

Orginal Christmas Song mp3s by Vending Machine

For the whole month of December (and the last week of November) we are making 4 of our original Christmas songs available for streaming and download. Here's a quick rundown:


wot is nog - w/Shelby Bryant [download]
Have you ever wondered what is in egg nog? Old jelly rolls? Christmas lights? Find out what else!
Also - check out Shelby's great new record, Luscious, that just came out on Smells Like Records last week.


north pole christmas party band [download]
What happens when santa gets back from delivering all the toys? It's simple, a huge elf party with santa playing a double guitar solo all by himself.


candy powered sled [download]
A kid buys a sled from an electronics store at the North Pole that's got some cheap fuel.


fly on christmas dragon (with the yellow house singers) [download]
Santa needs help. Someone call the Christmas Dragon.

Play all of them together with the player over on the right column of the page.

Happy Holidays!

Thursday, November 08, 2007

Tom Martin designs 2007 Oxford American Music Issue

Congrats to Tom Martin (cover designer for King Cobras Do) on a great looking layout to the 2007 Oxford American Music Issue. Be sure to read the interview with him. Some great thoughts on design and life in general.

Tom and I had a band in junior high called the Dirty Toenails. I need to get some of those mp3s up soon.

Check out Tom's web site...

Thursday, October 18, 2007

The Hanged Man Preview at Indie Memphis

My friend Glenn Hopper has been writing and producing a movie over the past year and a half called The Hanged Man. I did the score and music supervising. It's going to preview this Saturday at the Indie Memphis Film Festival (http://www.indiememphis.com). It's playing at Studio on the Square - Saturday October 20th at 6:25pm (buy tix now - http://tinyurl.com/2pvbtf ). Come check it out!


Trailer:

Friday, September 14, 2007

ARTICLE: Cooper-Young festival has grown into a large regional outdoors event

FROM:
http://commercialappeal.com/news/2007/sep/14/block-party/

By Bob Mehr

Friday, September 14, 2007

As the Cooper-Young Festival enters its 20th year, the sheer numbers associated with the event have become eye-popping: 17 bands, 18 sponsors, 360-plus booths, and expected crowds of up to 65,000 are set to descend on the Midtown neighborhood this Saturday.

Started in 1988 as a small gathering, the annual festival -- staged by the Cooper-Young Business Association -- has grown exponentially since its humble beginnings. No longer just a showcase for local merchants, it's become one of the bigger outdoor festivals in the region, attracting a unique mix of people from throughout the Memphis area.

"I grew up in New York City, and I've traveled all over the world," says festival director Lyn Patrick Myers, "but this one-day happening is amazing. It's special in how it brings the various communities in Memphis together. A lot of people out east don't typically come into Midtown or Downtown or Cooper-Young, they stay out east. Our festival is a grand opportunity for family and friends from all over town to get together in one place, have a big party and kiss goodbye to summer."

The event -- at the intersection of Cooper and Young streets (see map Page 19) -- combines a variety of attractions, from concerts to booths featuring the works of local artisans, antique dealers and food vendors. "Aside from artisans and restaurants, we have everything from non-profits to doctors who do acupuncture on animals," Myers said. "It's a lovely group."

Parking is available on neighborhood streets.

Still, the main entertainment component of the event is musical. This year, 17 acts will be spread across three stages. Cameron Mann, manager of Young Avenue Sound recording studio -- who, like almost everyone involved with the festival, volunteers his time -- is handling the booking for the third consecutive year. He says the trick in selecting acts is to look at the big picture.

"With the festival being as large as it is, we get a pretty wide cross-section of people coming from Memphis and the surrounding areas," says Mann. "So what I try to do when I'm booking bands is to be as diverse as possible, really, to showcase as much variety as I can in terms of what's happening in the Memphis music scene."

Mann adds that the event strives to keep its focus on local and original talent. "One of the things we really pride ourselves on is supporting Memphis music and musicians, especially original musicians. Everybody who is playing the festival is from here. We don't take submissions from out-of-towners, and while a lot of cover bands apply, we really like to showcase original bands."

This year's lineup runs the gamut from Symbiosis, a Latin percussion group that resembles Buena Vista Social Club, to Giant Bear, an up-and-coming combo that puts a twist on bluegrass and roots music.

"We've also got Darrel Petties and Strength in Praise, an incredible gospel group," says Mann. "Then there's our headliners, Lucero, who are a great alt-country/punktry band. We've got Twin Pilot, which is a shoegazer group, as well as a lot of indie rock of varying kinds, plus singer-songwriters like Holly Cole and Blair Combest."

The growth of the C-Y Fest has become so pronounced in recent years, that it's actually spawned some side events, like the Two Chicks and a Broom "Chick Party." Candace Mills, who owns the Cooper-Young-based green cleaning company, originally launched her backyard concert bash three years ago as a small appreciation party for her employees, or Chicks.

"Now, we get several hundred people in and out through the whole day," says Mills, whose co-tenant, Light Years Vintage, also plays host to the event. "We ask for donations at the door and give all the money to a local charity each year. Our Chicks work hard, and there are so many musicians and artists among them, we wanted to show off their bands."

This year's Chick Party will feature half a dozen acts including psych-tinged instrumentalists Noise Choir, post-hardcore outfit Antique Curtains, indie-poppers Arma Secreta, performance art punks The Barbaras, and Mouserocket members Alicja Trout and Robby Grant playing an acoustic set.

Like the festival itself, Mills sees her event as a way for Memphians who aren't habitués of the area to get a snapshot of the neighborhood's charms. "This event is really family friendly. A lot of the parents of the Chicks will come. Or relatives or friends from out east who don't normally get a chance to enjoy Cooper-Young will come out and make a day of it."

As Lyn Patrick Myers notes, with summer temperatures suddenly taking a cooler turn, this year's festival might turn out to be the biggest ever. "If we have the weather that's predicted -- which is the high 70s and sunny with no humidity, we may get the entire world showing up," says Myers. "And we hope we do. It's like, 'What if you threw a party for 100,000 people and they all showed up?' It would be great."


Music lineup


Cooper-Young Festival Saturday

East stage:

12:30 p.m. - Hi Electric

1:30 p.m. - Twin Pilot

2:30 p.m. - Noise Choir

3:30 p.m. - The Third Man

4:30 p.m. - Jump Back Jake

First Congregational Church parking lot:

12:15 p.m. - Holly Cole

1:15 p.m. - Blair Combest

2:15 p.m. - Symbiosis

3:15 p.m. - Zazerac

4:15 p.m. - Ron Franklin and November 6th St.

Main stage

11:30 a.m. - Rhythm Realm

12:15 p.m. - U of M Jazz band

1:15 p.m. - Giant Bear

2:15 p.m. - Antenna Shoes

3:15 p.m. - Darrel Petties and Strength in Praise

4:15 p.m. - Vending Machine

5:15 p.m. - Lucero

Two Chicks and a Broom ''Chick Party'' at 885 S. Cooper

1 p.m. Noise Choir

2 p.m. Antique Curtains

3 p.m. Arma Secreta

4 p.m. The Barbaras

5 p.m. Alicja Trout and Robby Grant

6 p.m. Hi Electric

Suggested $6 donation for charity. Beer will be availble.

Thursday, May 17, 2007

Memphis Pops - July 28th, 2007

Saturday, July 28 at the Hi Tone Café Memphis
www.myspace.com/memphispops
6:00 Ardent Records 40th Year Documentary
7:00 70s sultry pop punks The Klits
8:15 Vending Machine
9:30 Antenna Shoes
10:45 Goner Recording star The Carbonas
12:00 The Everyday Parade featuring members of The Crime!
1:15 Viva L'American Death Ray

More info:

Vending Machine
www.myspace.com/vendingmachineband

Memphis’ Vending Machine is the nom-de-band of Robby Grant, a one-man local institution with a musical resume longer than Dom DeLuise’s grocery list. A journeyman aesthete that picks his projects and co-players with care, Mr. Grant has held down the guitar slot in Big Ass Truck, Mouserocket, and the Glitches to name a few. But Vending Machine is his baby, a great excuse to exercise an exceptional talent for furious, quirky pop. And I don’t mean “quirky” in the bad word sense, nor do I mean “pop” in the overt, uh, “pop” way. This is leftfield Southern eccentricity at its finest, without what you may associate with Southern rock, but more than a passing hint of the individuality that made early R.E.M. and Pylon so great. King Cobras Do is the fourth Vending Machine album in six years (plus a 7”), which is literally a saturation in Memphis music time, but that’s sort of what it takes in this town when you have the moxy to make something that falls outside of garage rock, blues, or Americana. Let’s hope that a widespread national appreciation follows in the wake of King Cobras Do, as an opening song like “Babies” deserves nothing less. It’s almost a chore to get to the rest of the album, as this song’s furious guitar/organ herky-jerking and sticky falsetto hook will be enjoyed 5 – 10 times before one realizes that it has eleven worthy successors. “44 Times” is dark indie blues (but catchy!! they’re all catchy!!) and the syncopated blip and burp of “Saturn National Anthem” shows a loose playfulness before its early-Pink Floydish meltdown. “Runaway” is like early acousti-lectric Sebadoh, and it’s neighbor, “Garden 1040 A.D.” is simply gorgeous and closes with a brilliantly haunting guitar-god solo. Not to lapse into the blow-by-blow format, as these things are wont to do, so I left out some treasures that need finding. Underrated? Sure, but those days are numbered. Hear the magic.

Antenna Shoes
www.myspace.com/antennashoes

Antenna Shoes features Tim Regan's versatile workmanship and pop songwriting skills, culling songs from new inspirations, old dreams and ancient sagas. Regan took a sabbatical from his other all-consuming project, Memphis' Snowglobe, to live in the Smokey Mountains creating the ideal environment to write and record his first proper solo album. Along the way, Regan hooked up with fellow Appalachian Mark Linkus, of national indie stalwarts Sparklehorse, doing piano sessions for Sparklehorse's Dreamt for Light Years in the Belly of a Mountain. Regan has now decided the time is right to push Antenna Shoes to the next level and take this project on the road. Antenna Shoes' Generous Gambler looks the listener directly in the eyes with a sincerity and forthright honesty that has made Regan the coveted sideman he's become. Regan's debut CD pulls no punches, yet the range of emotions Antenna Shoes offers affect a warmth and sincerity that commands attention, listen after listen. www.antennashoes.com myspace.com/antennashoes

CARBONAS
www.myspace.com/thecarbonas

This one's a punk rock broken-hearted valentine for sure. With three sold-out singles and two sold-out full-lengths behind them, Atlanta's Carbonas are next to explode out of the happening Atlanta indie scene - fast in the footsteps of garage freaks The Black Lips and psych-poppers Deerhoof. Their new album on Goner Records is a twenty minute buzzsaw sugar rush full of massive guitar hooks and hummable choruses that won't shake out of your head. LP/CD in stores late August

VIVA L'AMERICAN DEATHRAY MUSIC
www.myspace.com/vivalamericandeathraymusic

2007 finds Viva L'American Deathray Music at the height of their powers as a three-piece, kings of all things hip, aloof, and intense. After years as Memphis' finest glam/soul VU spectacle this side of a quaalude and a time machine, they have morphed into a more calculated no-wave DIY juggernaut that does not fear the future. Their most recent record, "In the Meantime," was released on Kid Congo Powers' New York Night Train Label. They sound like Television and have the drummer from the Polyphonic Spree. Rather obviously, they are ace. - NME, 2006

The Everyday Parade
www.myspace.com/theeverydayparade

The Crime ruled Memphis new wave in the early '80s. In those days, everyone had a skinny tie and a Rickenbocker, but not everyone could write a song. Those that could often never left their parent's garage. The Crime did it all - killer harmonies, ripping guitar leads, and panty-littered stages. Now, Jeff Golightly and Rick Camp return, and, miraculously, the voices and the songs are still there! Backed by a crack crew of indie vets, Golightly is back in the fray, with a new album set to come out in July.

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Snocap and Myspace

All the songs from two Vending Machine albums ("Chamber from Here to There" and "Kicked and Scratched") are now available via digital download on MySpace.

Look for the Snocap area on the page:


More on Snocap...

Thursday, February 22, 2007

Vending Machine Band Pic....

... with Five filling in for Robert.



Thanks Judy...

Thursday, February 15, 2007

Pics from the Feb 3 show

Here are some pics from the February 3rd show at the Hi-Tone. We have a recording of it that I will be posting in the next few days. Keep an ear and eye out.



More pics here

Friday, February 02, 2007

Man and Vending Machine

Grant sings, plays, writes songs, builds Web sites and satisfies his urge to create
By Bob Mehr
February 2, 2007
FROM: The Commercial Appeal

On the surface, there's nothing really remarkable about Robby Grant. A quiet, unassuming 33-year-old, he's a husband, a father of two, a homeowner and has a job with a big title ("senior solutions architect") with local a advertising company. But Grant is also one of Memphis' more interesting singer-songwriters -- and has been for more than a decade.

Though he's probably best known as a member of now-defunct rock band Big Ass Truck, he's quietly built an impressive catalog as a solo artist, mostly recording under the name Vending Machine. Last month, Grant released his fifth album, King Cobras Do. A charmed collision of styles and sounds, its 12 tracks refract everything from '50s doo-wop to early '80s Australian pop through his own skewed kaleidoscope. Grant will mark the release of the disc -- and the launch of his new label, Shoulder Tap -- with a show at the Hi-Tone on Saturday.

Born in Little Rock, Grant grew up in a musical environment. His mother, who emigrated from England to the United States with her family during World War II, was a massive Beatles fanatic. His father was a Memphis native who'd fronted a mid-'60s garage outfit called the Deltas. "I have these vague, very early memories of him when he was singing and playing," says Grant. Grant's father was killed in a car accident when he was just 5, and the family left Little Rock and came to Memphis.

Grant first picked guitar as a teen and was soon playing in a succession of groups. "I've been in bands since seventh grade, and every group has been the logical extension of the previous one," he says. In high school, Grant, along with his classmate Steve Selvidge, formed Thrill of Confusion, which later became Fester, which -- after the pair graduated in 1991 -- evolved into Big Ass Truck. The latter group would enjoy a decade-long run and considerable national success, recording four critically acclaimed psych-tinged albums (including 1996's standout Kent) and touring heavily.

In the midst of his tenure with Big Ass Truck, Grant decided to indulge his avant-pop sensibilities, cutting an eclectic solo album as Robert Grant for North Carolina indie Yep Roc, before switching to the Vending Machine moniker with 2000's Chamber from Here to There for Boston's Powerbunny label. That year Grant joined his Big Ass Truck bandmates in the studio to write and record an experimental album called The Rug. But the group broke up soon after the album was released in 2001.

Meanwhile, Grant had begun teaching himself how to write computer code and do Web site design. "I was always interested in computers, long before you could go to school for that," says Grant. "So I had two tracks going at the same time. As a touring musician, you're not on the road all the time, so I had other jobs. Eventually, I stopped touring and those other jobs took over."

In 2000 Grant began working at local firm, Ringger Interactive -- the company's head, Paul Ringger, had been an early Big Ass Truck supporter and had actually released the group's first album. Ringger Interactive was eventually bought and Grant has been working at the new company since 2005.

Since the demise of Big Ass Truck, Grant's put out a series of largely one-man band, home-recorded and self-released Vending Machine titles: 2002's Five Piece Kit, 2004's Kicked & Scratched, and a limited-edition CD of holiday songs, released late last year. A prolific songsmith, Grant is constantly writing and piecing together songs from fragments before refining them in his attic studio.

"Mostly, I just record these 10- to 30-second ideas on a little tape recorder, and build a collection of those and then take them upstairs and flesh them out as songs."

Musically, Grant's latest, King Cobras Do, mixes his well-defined brand of left-field pop with more meditative moments. "I've been listening to a lot of quieter stuff. And as far as writing songs, I've gotten more personal than I have in the past. I write more specifically about what's going on in my life," says Grant, referring to numbers like "Rae" and "Tell Me The Truth and I'll Stop Teasing You," sweet odes to his wife and baby daughter.

Grant's unique recording process also dictated the warm, easy feel of the album. "I work in the mornings -- really early, before the kids get up," he says. "My studio is removed enough from their bedrooms so I can record -- I can't play drums but I can play guitar and sing."

While generally working around his kids, Grant did end up in an unlikely collaboration with his young son, Five, who provided the lyrics for the track "Saturn National Anthem."

"I played it for him and he was kind of free-associating some lyrics, and I pulled them together and put them in the song," says Grant who gave his son co-writing credit. "I mean, I won't be a stage father by any means, but I'd be lying if I said that it wouldn't be great to have a family band someday with my daughter playing drums and my son playing guitar."

Unlike his last few albums, King Cobras Do received a proper pressing and release -- a change made possible thanks to MTV. In 2005, through a connection with local roots rockers Lucero, the network contacted Grant to license instrumental versions of a pair of Vending Machine songs for placement in its "Real World: Austin" series.

"It was funny 'cause I made more money from one placement than I ever made selling records or CDs with any other band I've been in," says Grant. With his MTV windfall, Grant decided to start a small label, Shoulder Tap, with his friend, New York City-based musician Yazan Fahmawi. The new album was released to stores a couple weeks back, as well as on I-tunes -- and Grant already has secured further placements for songs from the CD for the new season of MTV's "Pimp My Ride."

Although largely a recording project, Grant does occasionally play out with a live version of Vending Machine. The core group includes Grant's younger brother Grayson on bass, Circuit Bender veteran Quinn Powers on guitar, and his longtime Big Ass Truck bandmate Robert Barnett on drums. Recently, the group added a second drummer, the Secret Service's John Argroves. "Fortunately, neither one of the guys are 'check me out' kind of drummers; they really listen to each other. Plus," jokes Grant, "playing with two drummers makes me feel a couple feet taller than I really am."

In addition to doing a handful of local shows over the next few months, Grant will mount a brief tour later in the summer. "In the days of Big Ass Truck, you really had to tour and get out there and play just to connect with people," he says. "With the Internet, connecting with fans is much easier these days. My only regret is that MySpace wasn't around in 1996."

Grant's other band, Mouserocket, which he co-fronts with singer/guitarist Alicja Trout, has been on a semi-hiatus while Trout's been touring with her main project, the River City Tanlines. However, Mouserocket will be going in to Memphis Independent studio later this month to complete tracks for a new album, the band's first since its 2004 self-titled debut.

For Grant, the commitments of a family and full-time job don't allow for music to be a 24-hour-a-day passion anymore. But he says his wife, Rachael, who teaches art at the Montessori school that the couple's children attend, has allowed him to pursue his muse. "I've known my wife since we were in high school, so she's very aware of the things that are important to me," says Grant. " In the end, I'm just creating. As long as I can do that, I'm happy."

Link to article

Link to PDF

Thursday, February 01, 2007

Vending Machine’s Robby Grant On Music, Family

FEBRUARY 1, 2007 - 03:44 PM

I’ve known Robby Grant since the sixth grade. (We also went to religious school and high school together.) We always ran in the same circles, but didn’t really get to know each other until about a year ago when I cornered him at the Children’s Museum and convinced him to help me get a Rock-n-Romp started. Now Robby and I often call on each other for favors—me more than him—and meet up for lunch downtown when we have the time. I recently sat down with him (tape recorder in hand) at the Majestic to talk about music, parenting, and the intertwining of the two. — Stacey Greenberg

When did you start playing music?

Robby: I was in 7th grade, so age 12, no 13. I had piano lessons when I was really young. I sucked at sports for the most part. Music was always a part of my life. My mom had a lot of great old 45s, a lot of great records. She was a fan of music. I got to choose what I wanted to play. I chose an electric guitar. I bought one with my cousin—we split it, but he never played it.

That was a good deal for you.

Robby: Yeah.

Why the electric guitar?

It looked cool. We went in the music store and it was the coolest thing in there. It was an Electra Phoenix with a whammy bar and it cost $100. My dad was a singer and my uncle played drums. My dad passed when I was really young (5). But I saw him sing when I was really little. Once I had the guitar, I immediately formed a band in seventh grade with my friend, Tom Martin. It was just the two of us for the first two albums. I like to learn by doing so I bought a guitar, formed a band, and started recording music.

How did you record?

With a jambox, and a tape recorder so I could multi-track. (This was all prior to being able to afford a 4-track.) It sounds a lot fancier than it was. We had skits and songs. We played at my Bar Mitzvah. We tried out for my high-school talent show every year. In 10th grade we did Jimi Hendrix’s “Fire.” In 11th grade we did “Pinball Wizard” by the Who, which probably wasn’t a smart choice since my high school had such a big hearing-impaired program. In 12th grade I played drums and we played “The Devil Went Down to Georgia.”

Did you ever win?

No.

So how did you go from not winning talent shows to being in the very successful band, Big Ass Truck?

It was a natural progression. We got a 4-track and did some recording with that. Then in college [The University of Memphis where Robby got a film degree] I got together with some friends [including Steve Selvidge] and started playing in a band called Thrill of Confusion. I spent a lot of time making videos too. TOC disintegrated and morphed into a band called Fester. Our drummer went away to UT, so we never practiced. We got together and just played noise for 45 minutes when we opened up for The Simple Ones and surprisingly Jared (the lead singer) liked it. However, I wasn’t interested in pursuing a noise band at that point. Steve got five friends together to open for the Simple Ones at the Antenna in 1991 and that was basically Big Ass Truck. We had a lot of friends and hung up a lot of flyers. We played frequently—once a month for four or five years. Then did more regional shows. Then we toured the U.S. for four years.

What was the band’s peak?

Our peak was the last record we made—we wrote it in the studio. It was the culmination of all the time we spent together. We were on some weird MTV show “Oddville.” We had a video—Robert Gordon shot it. It was on “120 Minutes” on VH-1. We had five CDs total.

Where in all this did you get married and start having kids?

Rachael and I dated as seniors in high school and have been together ever since. We got married when I was 24, so 1997. I was gone a lot during that time. I was on the road a lot. There was the whole “absence makes the heart grow fonder” thing going on. We had a lot of time to do our own things. I think that contributes to the fact that we are still married almost 10 years later. Five was born while I was still touring. I missed the whole first year of his life.

What was that like?

I missed being there—we were really busy—but having never been a father before I didn’t know what I was missing. We were the first ones of our friends to have kids.

Was Rachael like, “You suck?”

Not really. I’d be home for a few weeks at a time. I could never do it now. Five is seven now and he’d have like a million questions I couldn’t answer.

Did having Five contribute to the band’s break up?

Not really. We quit when we all still liked each other. We’d been doing it for 10 years and it had just run its course.

So what did you do when Big Ass Truck broke up?

After Five was born, I started doing side work for Paul Ringger at Every CD and then later for Ringger Interactive. I took a laptop on the road and built Web sites while I was in the van. I didn’t have to wonder what I was going to do when we broke up. I just started going to work more. I had a desk at Paul’s house. I was always home every couple of weeks—it wasn’t like I was out of sight out mind for very long. Paul taught me a lot and gave me a lot of books to read. We built a lot of sites together and I just learned that way.

So Five is two, you have a day job, how do you express yourself musically at this point?

Three or four years before Big Ass Truck broke up, I was already doing my own thing—I released two solo records, one under the name Vending Machine. It actually gave me a chance to express myself without the constraints of being in the band When it’s just me it’s like, “I like the beat, let’s record it.” I also just wanted to play guitar and not necessarily write songs, so I started playing in Mouserocket with Robert Barnett (from Big Ass Truck).

Do you have like a whole in-house recording studio?

I’ve recorded all my records at home. I wouldn’t call it a recording studio, but I can go up at 5:30am and record what I want. I can’t schedule a whole session with other people—that’s hard to do. I like recording early morning, but no earlier than 5:30am.

When do you go to sleep?

Robby: I usually go to bed at 11pm or midnight. I’ve got bags under my eyes.

What about including Five in your music?

The record before this, he’d scream and I’d loop it. On the last one I hit a wall a couple of times when writing a song and I’d play it for Five and say, “What does this sound like to you?” On one of the faster ones, he was like, “It sounds like cobras.” It actually inspired me to name the album King Cobras Do. He even wrote the lyrics to the Saturn National Anthem. He was sort of free associating words. I rearranged them a bit, but they’re his words. We also do a lot of recording where he’ll come up and he’ll play drums or guitar or keyboards and just make some noise on the weekends. We’ll take turns being boss. He’s a hard boss. For the past three years we’ve done a holiday song as a family and sent it out to friends.

Is Sadie (Robby’s two-year-old) getting involved?

She’ll bang on the drums and do her thing. She inspired a new song called “Tell me the truth and I’ll stop Teasing You.”

How often do you play shows?

Once every other month. My other band, The Glitches, has a few gigs.

Ok, wait. You are in another band?

I saw Jared (from the Simple Ones) at a PTA meeting—our kids go to the same school—and the school and I said, “We need a band to play at the thing at the end of the year.” We hadn’t had a chance to play together so we formed the Glitches, which is a cover band, and now we’re good friends. We play a lot of the school functions and it’s fun. We’re currently looking to play private parties…you know if anyone is interested?

So what do you do when you have a late show? Does Rachael come?

Sadie is experiencing the terrible twos so it’s hard to find a babysitter. Rachael probably comes to every other show. But we practice at the house so she’s very aware of our set.

Do the kids ever get to see you play other than at Rock-n-Romp?

Yeah we did a show at the Shell and the Center for Southern Folklore. I got Sadie some big soundproof headphones so she could listen.

So is being in three bands now somehow easier than being in Big Ass Truck?

Big Ass Truck was a lifestyle commitment. We practiced two times a week, we had beers after practice, we toured, etc. Now I’m more focused on end goals, like finishing a record. I have a show next week and the band has practiced for the last month so we can do several shows now.

Do you go out and hear music very often?

I don’t go out near as much as I used to. But with the Internet I can keep up with music via Myspace, web sites, and various message boards. It’s a pretty good alternative to going out. I can get 10 firsthand accounts of any show sitting at my desk.

What are your musical ambitions at this point?

At this point, just to keep making music. Big Ass Truck did some shows with Ben Harper and he was touring with his family. They had a separate camper. I saw him kiss his daughter goodnight before going to a show. I could see us doing that in a few years (not quite at that scale). Rachael likes to travel. For now, music from my last two albums was featured on “The Real World” and I just released some new songs to “Pimp My Ride.” I’m interested in doing movies. I just scored Glenn Hopper’s movie—The Hanged Man.

Do you see yourself having a family band someday?

Five takes piano lessons. I see music as a way to express myself, and I hope Five has something like that. I want him to be happy and have something that he enjoys doing forever. I might get Sadie to take cello lessons. We need someone in the family to play a classical string instrument.


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Stacey Greenberg's blog
Memphis Rock n Romp

One-Man Bands

BY ANDRIA LISLE | FEBRUARY 1, 2007
FROM: The Memphis Flyer

Recorded under the moniker Vending Machine, Robby Grant's latest, King Cobras Do, is scheduled for release this weekend. On Saturday, February 3rd, he's having an album-release party at the Hi-Tone Café; the self-released CD is also available at Goner Records and Shangri-La Records.

With 12 songs and guests ranging from former Big Ass Truck bandmates Robert Barnett and Steve Selvidge to current Glitches bandmates Adam Woodard and Jared and Lori McStay, King Cobras Do runs the gamut from frenzied pop ("Babies," the album's opener) to blues rock ("44 Times") and surreal space music ("Saturn National Anthem").

The stylishly experimental, electronic-flavored music favored by artists such as Beck -- and, closer to home, former Memphian Shelby Bryant -- factors in on "Memories and Actions," "Desert Sun Played," and the aforementioned "Saturn National Anthem," while "Yawp" shares the same sonic space as Santo & Johnny's "Sleepwalk" transmogrified with, say, Southern Culture on the Skids' "8 Piece Box."

"Shelby has had a big effect on me," Grant admits. "When Big Ass Truck was recording Kent at Ardent, he lived right across the street from the studio. Later, when I started doing a lot of four-track sessions at my house, he was the first person I collaborated with. Recently, we've been in touch, writing and collaborating on songs over the Internet."

By now, Grant has bypassed the four-track machine for Sony Vegas, a program similar to ProTools -- and on King Cobras Do, he partnered with an up-and-coming lyricist, his 7-year old son, Five.

"He does a lot of free association," Grant says. "Sometimes I use his words as-is; other times, I'll turn a phrase around or just build on something he said.

"Upstairs, in my home studio, I have a piano and an acoustic guitar. I'll start with little ideas, just bits and pieces that I'll build on until the songs become what they become. I go back, listen quite a bit, and do a lot of editing, then move onto the next song. It's a constant revision," he says, noting that the process to complete this album, his fourth CD in six years, took 28 months.

"On 'Saturn National Anthem,' I had the song and the lyrics, but I felt like it needed something else," Grant explains. "I extended the first part of the song, but it still needed a solo, and it popped into my head that Steve [Selvidge] could do a spacey, wicked guitar part. I gave him the files, and he recorded it. In the case of Robert [Barnett], a lot of times I have ideas in my head that I can't play. He's such a creative drummer, and I'm a more keep-the-beat kind of guy."

When Vending Machine plays at the Hi-Tone this Saturday night, the band will be a five-piece, with Grant's brother Grayson Grant on bass, guitarist Quinn Powers, and two drummers, Barnett and John Argroves. For more information, visit Vending Machine's Web site at ChocolateGuitars.com.


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REVIEW: The cozy comfort of Vending Machine's homemade pop.

BY CHRIS HERRINGTON | FEBRUARY 1, 2007

FROM: The Memphis Flyer

So much indie rock these days can feel so insular -- consciously separated from the larger world. But King Cobras Do, the fifth solo album from former Big Ass Truck singer/guitarist Robby Grant and fourth under the Vending Machine moniker, makes insular work in its favor. Recorded at the attic studio of Grant's Midtown house, King Cobras Do doesn't sound estranged -- it sounds homey, cozy. It radiates a unity of production, tone, and content.

The cumulative impact of this intimate album is that of an energizing hymn to domesticity in both its subject matter and musical spirit. With images of dancing in the den to daylight, the second song, "Rae," is a hand-clap-fueled love song to Grant's wife. The memories here are charmingly lived-in: "When you developed photos there/And we hung out and I sat in the chair/Nervous and scared around you" and "Remember when our room was just a bed."

The album-closing "Tell Me the Truth and I'll Stop Teasing You" is a delicate tribute to Grant's 2-year-old daughter. "The animal noises that you make never sound all that fake/It feels like there's an elephant in the room," Grant testifies, before a great little moment where he catches her yawning. And Grant's 7-year-old son makes a more tangible appearance, contributing some free-associative lyrics to "Babies" and "Saturn National Anthem."

On "Good Old Upstairs," Grant expands the theme with a personification of the attic home studio where the album was recorded. ("In my sleep, she nudges me/To come up and play around some more.") And, with his one-man band bolstered by an extended family of siblings (Grayson Grant), former bandmates (Big Ass Truckers Steve Selvidge and Robert Barnett), and friends (Jared and Lori McStay), the intimacy of the record is more inclusive than most bedroom pop.

Even the songs that don't take domesticity as subject matter -- the gently melodic acoustic/electric "Runaway"; the relaxed, toe-tapping "Desert Sun Played" -- sound like testaments to the creative comfort zone that home provides. The album feels like a spring breeze blowing through an open kitchen window; a front-porch packed with family and friends. -- Chris Herrington

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Wednesday, January 31, 2007

Download the Vending Machine WEVL show

Thanks to Andrew (host of the Memphis Beat), Judy, Brian, and Stephanie at WEVL. We had a great time playing there on Tuesday. Most of the songs we played are from our new CD - King Cobras Do (order now).



Download the mp3s:
Runaway
Desert Sun Played
Tell Me The Truth and I'll Stop Teasing You
Rae

The players:
Quinn Powers - guitar
Grayson Grant - bass
Robert Barnett - drum and cowbell
Robby Grant - guitar, keyboards, and vocals
Five Grant - handclaps and pokemon handbook


Saturday, January 20, 2007

CD Release Show - February 3rd

We are playing February 3rd at the Hi-Tone with Jack O. and the Tennessee Tearjerkers (or could be the Flipside Review).

Vending Machine will consist of:
Grayson Grant: bass
Quinn Powers: guitar
Robert Barnett: drums
John Argroves: drums
Me: guitar and singing

That's right you saw that correct - 2 drummers. Like 38 Special.

Poster by Brian Dixon:

I think we will have some of these for sale at the show.