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The Mudville Project : Portico
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Oklahoma Roots Rock: ". a lot of influence from alt. country and good old fashioned rock and roll. combining the worlds of John Mellencamp, Lynyrd Skynyrd and Buddy Holly with an indie/roots spin."
Genre: Rock: Heartland Rock
Release Date: 2005
Portico
The Mudville Project
Record Label: The Mudville Project
  • Download Album (MP3) - $6.99
  • Buy CD - $6.99
Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
The Tea 5:33 $0.99
Kinda Man 2:59 $0.99
Rice Check 3:49 $0.99
Home Again 5:16 $0.99
Long Road 3:40 $0.99
Twice 4:00 $0.99
Perfect Girl 3:53 $0.99
No Regrets 4:10 $0.99
Love Song 4:55 $0.99
Hector the Protector 4:06 $0.99
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Album Notes

Tulsa World SPOT Music Award winner and SXSW 2006 showcasing artist, The Mudville Project... with Randy Patton (RedEcco) on bass and long-time Boondogs drummer Dylan Turner, are rehearsing songs for a new CD (due in 2008).

With the release of their first disc, Portico, The Mudville Project serves up a big helping of twangy roots-rock. Hints of Jay Farrar, Jeff Tweedy and even some Tom Petty shine through, as well as the ragged growl of Black Crowes, Sticky Fingers-era Stones and Faces. These influences make it apparent the band is connected to rock-n-roll's past, not just the current Americana and alt-country trends.

Greg Klaus is the mastermind behind this little musical experiment as the primary songwriter and voice of The Mudville Project. As the original guitarist for Fanzine, Klaus has seen his share of success on the Tulsa music scene. When Fanzine won an Artist of the Year award in 2001 he realized something just wasn't right.

For Klaus, winning the award was anticlimactic. "I didn’t feel like an artist or that I was being true to myself," he shares. That epiphany was the point at which he decided he needed to get out. For all of the successes, the band and the process had become formulaic and old for him.

Joining the band Simon Starbuck helped Klaus get out of the rut he had worked himself into. When Greg was ready to work on the material that would end up as The Mudville Project, he called on Simon Starbuck guitarist Randy Patton, drummer Matt Brantley, and bassist Chuck Martin, who played bass on a number of tracks before stepping away when he re-located to Oklahoma City. Completing the musical equation is Grant Vespasian, whose ties to Klaus go back to being the original bass player for Fanzine.

Considering the histories of the players involved, this band might seem like a fairly radical departure from their previous endeavors. If you sit down to discuss the music with them, though, it’s obvious that its a matter of circling back to their roots and the basis of the music they love.

So where is this mysterious Mudville? As Greg explains it, "I grew up in Miami (OK), and we fondly referred to it as 'Mudville.'" The name just seemed to fit the band. "Were going back to where we came from, musically. You can change a lot about yourself, but not where you’re from."

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REVIEWS

Disappointed
author: Mike Johnson
The singer's voice blends in with the music on the much of the disk. What might be interesting to listen to becomes muddled.
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...a very strong recording...many unique tracks...overflows with promise.
author: Hybrid Magazine
Portico is the freshman effort by The Mudville Project, a collection of veterans on the Tulsa scene, who have managed to put together a great roots rock album... a lot of influence from alt. country and good old fashioned rock and roll... combining the worlds of John Mellencamp, Lynyrd Skynyrd and Buddy Holly with an indie/roots spin. Great hooks... this reminds me of some of the great bands I saw as a kid at county fairs and local festivals who still had originality, and were in it for the music, unlike many bands out there. Overall, this is a very strong recording with many unique tracks that overflows with promise. This album does not disappoint, and is well worth a listen for any fan of rockabilly or roots rock. These guys have a lot of talent and I am excited to see what comes of their next album.--Liger Woods
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...sounds fitted for a late-night drive or a post-break-up lament.
author: label worthy
The Mudville Project blends tasteful alt-country elements (see banjo, pedal steel, and theremin -- yes, we said theremin) with Iron-and-Wine-like vocals, forming sounds fitted for a late-night drive or a post-break-up lament. Ask the group about their sound, and they'll tell you to think of Uncle Tupelo and Lou Reed, whereas Label Worthy will add Pink Floyd, Doves, and Califone to that finely simmering stew of twanged-up rock. The first minute alone of "Home Again" is worth a listen... whether or not you're a fan of anything country, you can't deny that this music is memorable and well-crafted.
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Suffuse with atmosphere and re-listenable in an almost addictive way...
author: Oklahoma Gazette
The Mudville Project is quite clearly Tulsa resident Greg Klaus' baby--as the group's lyricist, arranger, vocalist, guitarist and occasional lap steel player, Klaus is the driving force behind this collection of starkly rendered, tumbleweed-studded rock. "Portico," Mudville's freshman effort, was recorded in Nashville, Tenn., and Tulsa, bleeding dark country soul along the way. From the feedback-laced majesty of "The Tea" to the winning ramble of "Home Again," Mudville evokes images of a close-knit band plowing through rehearsals in some windswept ramshackle house, stranded on a high, lonely stretch of prairie. Klaus' reedy, powerful vocals thread through the dense, expert music executed by compatriots Matt Brantley, Randy Patton, and Grant Vespasian. Suffuse with atmosphere and re-listenable in an almost addictive way, "Portico" marks another Okie band to watch. --Preston Jones
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