View All Artists

All Time Low
Angels and Airwaves
Brand New
Colbie Caillat
Family Force 5
Flobots
Flyleaf
Good Charlotte
Hawthorne Heights
Katy Perry
Minus the Bear
Motion City Soundtrack
Relient K
Safetysuit
Sara Bareilles
Saving Abel
Say Anything
The Academy Is
The Cab
We the Kings
Taveren

Breaking Benjamin
Cassidy
Jack's Mannequin
Lil Wayne
Ludacris
Lupe Fiasco
New Found Glory
Ok Go
Paramore
Plain White T's
Sick Puppies
T. Pain
T.I.
Talib Kweli
The Roots

All-American Rejects
American Hi-Fi
Anthony Hamilton
The Ataris
Ani DiFranco
Black Violin
Blackalicious
Black Eyed Peas
Bobby Valentino
Bowling For Soup
Boys Like Girls
Buckcherry
Busta Rhymes
Chrisette Michele
Common
Crossfade
David Banner
Dog Men Poets
Dropkick Murphys
Finger Eleven
Five For Fighting
Fuel
Hellogoodbye
Hoobastank
J. Holiday
Jadakiss
John Legend
Jimmy Eat World
Juvenile
Keyshia Cole
Less Than Jake
Letoya Luckett
Lifehouse
Lil Scrappy
Lit
Lyfe Jennings
Medeski, Martin and Wood
Mike Jones
Mos Def
Motion City Soundtrack
Musiq
Ne-Yo
Nothing More
O.A.R.
Paul Wall
Rick Ross
Robin Thicke
Rude Buddah
Sugarcult
Sum 41
Taking Back Sunday
Three Days Grace
Thursday
Tonex
Tonic
Trapt
Trey Songz
Trina
Uncle Kracker
Vertical Horizon
Yellowcard
Ying Yang Twins
Young Jeezy
Yung Joc

 

BACK

MOTION CITY SOUNDTRACK BIO

The way it works, everyone likes the first record better. You're a music fan, presumably, so you probably understand the idea here that, when placed in historical context, a band's initial statement to the world is often seen as its most lasting. Motion City Soundtrack began in Minneapolis in 1999. Two years ago, they released their first album, I Am The Movie, crawled inside a van for seemingly the end of eternity and shot a video with their friends back home for "The Future Freaks Me Out," a loud and instantly enjoyable anthem that has become such an undeniable apex at the band's live shows that it is no longer sung by singer/guitarist Justin Pierre as much as it is sung back at him.

But as ubiquitous as it became, the song perfectly captured Motion City's allure. Irresistible and unhinged, "The Future Freaks Me Out" was a reference point for what was to come with Commit This To Memory, ironic considering they wrote the song in mere hours and it almost didn't even make it onto their debut. "Two weeks before we went in, [guitarist Joshua Cain] played the part and I sang those words and that's what came out," Pierre says now in amazement. "It was completely random. But that's how we work. It's funny when there's talk about how this record could 'make or break us.'" He laughs. "This band has always gone on its gut instinct."

Last year, by way of the unrelenting schedule they kept behind I Am The Movie, the band was asked to join Blink-182 on a tour of Europe and, then, Japan. Somewhere backstage and in between, bassist Mark Hoppus modestly mentioned to the group that he was interested in pursuing production work once Blink took a necessary pause later in the year. Though he didn't know it at the time, Hoppus had just found his first client. "We thought of it almost as a joke,'" Cain recalls. "But on our last day of tour I asked him, point blank, 'Do you want to produce our record?' When he said, "Fuck yeah" I was like, 'Okay… can I get your phone number then?'"

Stretching out in Los Angeles later that fall and occasionally propped up by some of their other famous friends, Commit This To Memory finds Motion City the sort of definitive record usually reserved for much later or—to really bring this full circle—slightly earlier in a band’s career. "Everything Is Alright," the album's first single (with Fall Out Boy's Patrick Stumph and Limbeck's Rob MacLean and Patrick Carrie there in the background), isn't about writing off their past as much as it is putting a fine point to it. With Hoppus' encouragement, Pierre, alongside Cain, bassist Matthew Taylor, moogist Jesse Johnson and drummer Tony Thaxton have begun stepping back from—and outside of—their roles when necessary.

"Any time we wanted to take a chance with Mark he would go for it," Cain recalls. "He was so supportive. He would always say, 'Your name is going to be a lot bigger on the front of the record than mine will be on the back.'"

The relationship that they developed with Hoppus may have helped hone Motion City's uniquely and cinematic sound of sound but, more importantly, it encouraged them to open the windows and allow themselves room to breathe. The space inevitably allowed Pierre's charismatic personality the room it has long since needed. A former film school student who has always likened himself to a director first, a musician second, and now some fascinating form of the two, is projecting his own life here. Songs like the plaintive, near-ballad "Hold Me Down" and the incredibly candid "Resolution" are among the most personal that he has ever written. "I think I tried to be as honest as possible on this record," he stresses. "I was less inhibited on this one from hiding. In the last two years this was what was going on."

While it's true that Commit This To Memory can trace itself incredibly close to Pierre's personal life, with repeated listens it's clearly more the work of five musicians, finding themselves and turning to one another. "We've learned the reality of what we were doing," Cain says humbly. "When we left [I Am The Movie producer] Ed Rose, we left with a record that was better than our band. So we went home and had to become that good." Which is otherwise what they've done. But really, it's also where all these rules about second records and inhuman expectations begin to reverse and turn in on themselves. Motion City should have been trying to outdo themselves this whole time with Commit This To Memory. They found themselves instead.

"I really think we've achieved everything we can as human beings playing music," Pierre says with a slight hint of laughter. "Really, we just played in our own city, selling out a show at [First Avenue], which is where we saw all our favorite shows. And that was something that I've wanted to do since I was 14." In a way, Commit This To Memory recalls the lost indie heroes Cain and Pierre spent those formative years in Minneapolis poring over, but there's also a slight irony in the fact that this is the one record that seems destined to lead to their own version of this. "I would love to say that I don't care what people think," Pierre stresses. "But you know, I am like most people. I do hope people like it."

Whatever you make of the second Motion City Soundtrack album is now left up to the songs you're currently holding onto. As for us? We couldn't possibly be any prouder.

   
 
  office 877.218.2231 fax: 610.872.5038
all rights reserved copyright 2003 © sphinx management group