Monday, May 11, 2009

Tales From The Stable - Part 3


"Amongst the mud portraits, scribbled maps and unfinished poems in my moleskin there are some scraps of what could pass as a diary. I have included them here for your viewing pleasure and to give you a little background on the early days of Casa Murilo, or Dr Chocolate and the Salvadors as they were back then. It’s been an interesting ride..."


December 2007.

When you are up near Cachoeira da Fumaça you do encounter other groups of Walkers. You can tell them by their hiking boots, colourful nylon rain jackets, backpacks and water bottles. Rarely do you see, or rather hear, a gang of whiter than white gringos in flip-flops, Bermuda shorts and bikini’s banging out 60´s pop songs on battered guitars, playing drums on their rib cages and dragging a cool-box of beer behind them. Our guide, certainly hadn’t.

Smokey Falls are so called because there is not a great deal of water falling and it is at the end of a long deep valley, so when the wind blows the water is carried with it up into the air and from a distance looks like smoke emanating from a small hole in the rock. If you are on the edge of the valley on a sunny day with the wind in your face, and looking through the correct rainbow tinted hippy glasses, the tiny sparkling droplets of water take on the appearance of a school of mirror fish swimming and swerving straight towards you. It is truly magical.

According to the guide books there are several ways to get down the mountain, but none of them suggest running at full speed, jumping off of the huge rocks and shouting like Red Indians on a war path, but this is the route we carved for ourselves. Our guide, now lovingly named Jungle Boy, with whom we had bonded throughout our days in the rain forest, had kindly invited us into his home to meet his wife and 1 year old daughter, named malouca, meaning crazy. No one has big houses here but nonetheless we were a little surprised to find the family home a hut with no door or windows exactly big enough for a huge old-style American refrigerator and one double mattress. Bearing in mind we had had close encounters with 2 snakes, a tarantula and a nest of killer hornets, and the fact that the closest hospital was a 4 hour drive away, I thought this would be a particularly difficult place to raise a child. You had to move the mattress to open the fridge, which contained nothing but beer and baby food.

It was outside this very shack, as the sun set silhouetting the mountains in front of us and tinting the few clouds a range of electric pinks, purples, oranges and blues, that we sang an amazing 6 minute version of Waterloo Sunset with everyone finding something to play. Even Jungle Boy, who spoke not a word of English, sung along.

Some of the group were still feeling a bit magical on the bus home to Salvador. Dan and Chris were so taken with the home made pick-up/death-trap that was to ferry us back to town to catch the proper bus home that they were running around collecting cash off of everyone to prove to the driver they was serious in their intention to ride it all the way back to the big city. Unfortunately the driver was even more serious when he pointed out that the truck might not make it the 20km back to the village and certainly would not survive the 500km back to Salvador, no matter how loud we sung.

The bus has made a stop at a service station. It is a one room shack with a toothless lady selling a few choice goods for truck drivers, mainly hard booze. Dan is at the counter in full charm mode. The woman only sells rum by the glass. Dan is explaining that it is my 21st birthday (I will actually be 23 in 7 months time) and he needs a price on all the booze in her shop. She is laughing. He leaves with a bottle and a half of rum and a packet of what appear to be home made cigarettes. The pain of returning home is easing as I write…


Listen to us: http://www.myspace.com/casamurilo


Follow us on twitter: http://twitter.com/casamurilo

Thursday, May 7, 2009

New new beginnings

As always, things are moving fast here at HQ.

Tomorrow sees our first proper gig. We´re playing at Habibis Café in the centre of Oslo, with support from our dear friend Bård Watn. Freddy, mentioned in earlier posts, is now officially our drummer and he will be playing with us. We´ve arranged a couple of late surprises in the set. We look forward to seeing you all down there. We aim to entertain, as always. Bård will be kicking the evening off at 9pm sharp.

There will be a few representatives from what can only be described as the Oslo Indie Music Scene including a very new friend, the music writer Thea Melberg, who has already given us a mini write up on her excellent Scando Music Blog - Nordic Noises.

We´ve also been confirmed to play at Oslo Music Day, or Musikkfest Oslo as they call it round these parts. We´ve even done a little biography/influences piece for the programme. It´s an enormous citywide festival for one day only, that day being June 6th. We will be playing at 3pm at a bar in Grünerløkka called Fugazi. More information to come, of course.

Other than that, things are going wonderfully. We´ve been meeting some lovely and not unimportant people, putting together a very ambitious plan and as usual looking to take things to the next level. We´d like to think we´re doing that quite nicely.

It´s been nice to have such a kind response to Ross´s guest posts. We have a few more Tales From The Stable to put up. We´re just waiting for the right time. It will be soon.

Big Love. Let´s go people.

Friday, April 24, 2009

Anniversary

Today is the 6 month anniversary of Casa Murilo.

We have gone from having 0 songs, no gigs and no name to 13 songs, 8 gigs done, 3094 myspace views and 3789 listens. The eagle eyed amongst you will note that´s a marvellous 1149 unique views on our myspace in the last month. Oh yes. Things are moving so fast we couldn´t even offer a slightly larger bag of name brand insant mashed potato mix (just add water!) to the 3000th viewer. Our apologies. The prize for our 4000th viewer will undoubtedly make up for it.

The big step up to full band, recording the EP and gigs galore is coming over the next few Summer months. We´re meeting with some lovely musicians over the next week to get a little help, including the excellent Oslo Indie peeps Bård Watn and Simen Herning of My Little Pony.

We´re still hard at work, as ever. We´ve been writing some really excellent songs, recieved several more fantastic "Tales From The Stable", been offered some exciting gigs, edited the now infamous "St Hanshaugen In The Snow" video, helped build Dan and Linda´s wardrobe and chest of drawers, and generally living, eating and breathing this, our wonderful songs and band. The sun is shining brightly in Oslo and the world is well.

We also are now on twitter. Finger. Pulse. http://twitter.com/casamurilo

Monday, April 6, 2009

Tales From The Stable - Part 2


"Amongst the mud portraits, scribbled maps and unfinished poems in my moleskin there are some scraps of what could pass as a diary. I have included them here for your viewing pleasure and to give you a little background on the early days of Casa Murilo, or Dr Chocolate and the Salvadors as they were back then. It’s been an interesting ride..."

December 2007.

We had arrived. At least we thought we had arrived. We were about to climb into what appeared to be a home-made pick-up truck. I think it once was a car. And a small car at that. Now, thanks to some rural jeitinho, she has a wooden platform on the back with some tin sides half nailed, half welded on. The driver laughed at the mention of a seatbelt and, with guitars braced between legs, fedoras pulled down firmly and knuckles white we bump off down the dusty track like contestants on some kind of TV game show version of Buckaroo.

It’s noisy, it’s dusty and everyone is squinting and shouting. As we crest a particularly militant bump I lurch to my right and as I strain to see what suddenly created this space I see the side of the truck dragging along the floor and my dear friend Jobbo dangling precariously by Dan’s guitar strap just above it. It´s like the closing scene of Bond movie. His feet are thrashing about like a man who has just been hung, and how nearly he was just drawn and quartered. He is pulled back into the truck and everyone exchanges those relieved looks and puffs a bit. Jobbo lights a trembling cigarette.

For dinner this evening we went to one of the two restaurants in the village. The first option was a lady’s front room, and, not having enough chairs for us all, we went to the pizza place instead. The menu is a single, laminated piece of A4 with main courses on one side and dessert on the other. For main course there is a pizza. Dessert is exactly the same pizza with banana on it. Not a great deal of choice but what they do, they do well. We are particularly fond of the local honey and Cachaça mixture that sits in plastic bottles on every table. Alcoholic sugar, mmmmmmmm.

Jobbo is sat on his bed, he has one eye closed and is peering into the top of a whiskey bottle. “Teacher’s, Teacher’s what will you teach me today?” It is 9am. It would be fair to say he has not dealt with near death too well so far. It is Christmas Day and we are going hiking. Not to take Jobbo´s mind off things but because that is what one does when in a National Park in the North East of Brazil. Especially when at the foot of the Misty Mountain Trail...

Tales From The Stable - Part 1

Things are progressing rapidly here at Casa Murilo HQ. Spring is here in all its finery and we are gigging at house parties, rehearsing with an (almost) full band and making all the necessary plans to record our debut EP and get to where we need to be. We had a triumphant gig on Saturday night and are pushing on.

In the meantime, we asked our very dearest friend, one Ross Holmes, to furnish our blog with a few pen strokes and tell of his recollections of those heady days in Brazil that you hear of in our songs. The first instalment is included below.

For those who have been asking about the videos we have up on youtube, one is up on our myspace already and we have a few more that we like which we´ll be ready to share with the world soon enough.

Enjoy. Kos dere.

"Amongst the mud portraits, scribbled maps and unfinished poems in my moleskin there are some scraps of what could pass as a diary. I have included them here for your viewing pleasure and to give you a little background on the early days of Casa Murilo, or Dr Chocolate and the Salvadors as they were back then. It’s been an interesting ride..."

December 2007.

“So we’re off to the Jungle for xmas. And yes, the Jungle is massive. It’s 10pm, 32 degrees and we are the only people in the bus station sweating. We are also the only people playing an impromptu gig with 2 acoustic guitars and an ensemble of water-bottle percussion to 12 of our closest friends and lovers. Two rum bottles are circling and our cigarette smoke hangs ominously in the still, tropical air, only disturbed by our laughter and clapping. We are quite the attraction in Salvador’s Rodoviaria.

"I think Dan and Chris are making sweet musical love. Dan is leading a Johnny Cash mega-mix and Chris has predicted and followed perfectly while staring deep into Dan’s eyes, occasionally giggling and flicking his hair out of his eyes. Maybe I’ll get to be the page boy.

"We’re on the bus. All the other passengers are getting out blankets and settling in for the night. We’ve just finished a progressively rowdy version of ‘Fairytale of New York’ in full Shane McGowan accents. I thought Dan was going to start spitting to complete the impression. Fortunately Joe’s Thai sleeping pills seem to have kicked in and Dan is now hunched over his guitar dribbling, the impression complete.

"Ooof. My watch indicates that we are 8 hours into a 6 hour bus ride. We are stationary and the driver is nowhere to be seen. You have to love rural Bahia.

"Just came back from a reconnoiter. There’s a few men at the front of the bus, occasionally looking at the engine offering their diagnoses. One of them is a habitual tyre kicker. I milled about on the edges with my hat pulled low quietly smoking my fag and if my Portuguese isn’t failing me it seems we have run out of petrol."

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Milestones etc.

As I´m sure everybody is aware, we have 1963 profile views on myspace. Smashing.

2000 is but a few days away if all goes well. In celebration of this historic event I think it is fitting that we should offer a prize.

Anybody that can prove that they are the 2000th viewer or viewess of the page will win a small bag of Smash.

This offer is only open to those residing in Norway. Oslo to be precise.

Its 1965 views now........

xx

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Spring Rolls and a no.19


Happy day? I have. Now your turn.

We have been finishing off a few songs tonight in Krumgata HQ. They are on Myspace for your listening pleasure. Please enjoy.

Oslo is a beautiful place to be right now, Spring is on its way and the snow is slowly disappearing. I hope. With Easter on the way and soft yellow birds jumping out of eggs the world over, we have managed to hatch a fluffy little soldier of our own. We now have a bass player to add to our burgeoning arsenal of musicians.

We went to watch Tommy Tokyo and Starving For My Gravy at Park Teatret in Oslo last Saturday, it was an incredible show and you should all open a new window in your browser immediately and go to http://www.myspace.com/tommytokyo to check him out. He is playing in Brighton soon so all you folks back home should make a date in your diaries.

I think thats all for now, hope you like the new songs.

Hugs and Kisses

Casa Murilo
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