He's bald, his house beats bounce like no others, and he's blue at least in the cartoons. British underground producer Mike Monday is taking aim at something more than niche success with his recent signing to San Francisco label Om, but his new album, Songs Without Words, is hardly mainstream house fare. From titles that reference Spongebob Squarepants to track styles that veer from dubstep to 2-step to banging house and back again, Monday keeps listeners off-balance in the best way.
Monday born Michael Mukhopadhyay did time at Oxford studying music before heading into the nightlife wilds, as well as playing sax in 1990s live electronic outfit Beat Foundation (his partner Andy Cato went on to form Groove Armada). But Monday is best known for his work on 12-inch singles and songs like "Bhaloboshi," which M.A.N.D.Y. included on its Fabric mix, and "I Dream of Ducks," from his first album, Smorgasboard, released two years ago on the producer's Playtime imprint. His thick slabs of synths, sparkling production, and springy beats have found homes in both minimal and electro camps with DJs like Claude Von Stroke and Tiefschwarz championing his tunes.
Songs Without Words, however, is not about tools for Technics, even if Monday admits his DJ background influenced not only the song order but the songs themselves. Over the phone from his London home studio built in a garage in his garden Monday confides that he tweaked tracks so they worked together, even changing the key to achieve the proper fit. "You can call it an album and have all different sorts of music," he says. "What matters is the pacing and the flow and how it listens from beginning to end. I almost spent as much time wrestling with the [song] order as I did with the music itself."
Despite initial doubts about signing his album to a more commercial label and a Yankee one at that Monday overcame his hesitations due to his affection for the people behind Om and his respect for their attempts to release electronic music in more than one genre, an openness that seemed to mirror Songs Without Words' breadth. And having more resources behind him has allowed for amusing excursions such as animated cartoons showcasing flying key-tars, pink cats, and a blue Mike Monday. Produced by Drunk Park, the cartoons are as weird and wacky as Monday's music. "I really like the idea of not using dour, cool artwork for electronic music," he explains. "Because to be honest, that's not the type of person I am." (Peter Nicholson)
MIKE MONDAY
Sat/4, 10 p.m., $15
Mezzanine
444 Jessie, SF
(415) 625-8880
Also from this author
Berkeley beat brain Replife keeps an Unclosed Mind
Hip-hop akin to busting a wheelie
King Most and Kero One show the way
Also in this section
Using darkwave, gangster-punk, and '90s house throwbacks, experimental party curators dig deep in the grooves
A brief tour of the bearish actor's magical musical moments before his band hits town
Catching up with San Francisco's underground BART musicians
Most Commented On
Recent comments
- You have a lot of leverage with supes up for re-election - May 23, 2012
- SF Ocean Edge, - May 23, 2012
- I can enjoy GG Pk without a million lbs of toxic tire particles - May 23, 2012
- "We need 6 supes..." The way - May 23, 2012
- Well you would know, wouldn't - May 23, 2012
- Good editorial against plastic turf project in Richmond Review - May 23, 2012
- Judith is right - May 23, 2012
- You're misspelling "Lucretia" - May 23, 2012
- San Diego Park & Rec: plastic fields cost 50% more than grass - May 23, 2012
- Must-see youtube video about dangers of plastic turf fields - May 23, 2012










