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A common response when you get an invitation is, “I’m sorry, I just can’t make it.” In a perfect world, I’d make it, but man, this is a fallen world. It’s not possible. I just can’t do it.

Whenever I say “I can’t make it” what I really mean is “Technically, if I overextended myself, neglected responsibilities and relationships, I could make it. But I don’t really want to” – or “I just don’t want to go.” Maybe that’s what you mean, too. Whatever you mean, maybe you said “I can’t make it” when I invited you to my Facebook concert recently.

It’s ok, I understand. We all get busy. But worry not – you can view the whole thing for free:

You’ll have to disregard the offers for free stuff, because that ship has sailed! Stay tuned for the next concert, though. I’ll probably do another one before I die.

In the Earbuds – “Songs of Experience” by U2

This collection of new songs from the nearly 40 year old band is such a breath of fresh air. By the way, is there any other band that has stayed active with their original lineup for this long? I don’t think so.

I haven’t been really taken with much of their material in the past 15 years, but this album is rejuvenating. It reminds me of 2000’s “All That You Can’t Leave Behind.” Great hooks, a sort of raw, understated production, the Edge’s trademark delay guitar leads, and some classic Bono poetry:

“Dinosaur wonders why it still walks the earth; meteor promises it’s not gonna hurt”
“Blessed are the liars, for the truth can be awkward.”
“I have everything but I feel like nothing at all; there’s no risky thing for a man who’s determined to fall”
“Love is bigger than anything in its way”
“There’s a level of shallow that you just can’t fake”

Born out of political upheaval in the West and Bono’s own personal crisis, the songs are woven together by the ideal of Love – as much of U2’s music is. Although, this love is experienced in the real, broken world:

“You’re the best thing about me;
lovely things are easy to destroy
If you’re the best thing about me
Why am I walking away?”

Bono’s commentary on the songs is a bonus in the lyrics booklet; an eloquent elaboration on the meaning behind the songs. It should save you a Google with the terms “lyrics meaning.”

An outstanding comeback from the pop / rock titans.

I Cover a U2 Song

Speaking of U2, check out this acoustic slide version of their new song, Lights of Home:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I’m no Robert Johnson, but hey, who is? Besides Robert Johnson?

In the Earbuds: Paranormal by Alice Cooper

These days seem to be a renaissance of veteran rockers returning to make new and really good music (see Museletters 4, 8, 9 for reviews of Metallica, Ray Davies, Van Halen, and Matthew Sweet). This is the 127th (give or take 100) studio album by the original shock-rocker and evangelical Christian, Alice Cooper. Although he recently turned 70, Cooper and his signature snarl are as visceral as ever. These songs are gripping and powerful with attractive melodies. There is a spooky Trans-Siberian vibe on the title track and hyped-up Hendrix riffs on “Dead Flies.” “Rats” sounds like a deranged and enraged Chuck Berry howling out a low view of humanity. A “love” song only Alice Cooper could write, “Fallen in Love (And I Can’t Get Up),” has a great ZZ Top blues rhythm – so much so, they had to get Billy Gibbons himself to play guitar on it.

There is an Iggy and the Stooges kind of sound on “Private Public Breakdown” and “You and all your friends.” The production is polished and punchy. This album is hard to stop listening to. Highly recommended!

You can hear Alice Cooper in the regular rotation on my Spotify playlist, Give Me Liberty and Give Me Rock!

Parenting and the Mob

I never knew I was a member of the mafia until I became a parent.

 “Oh, I see you didn’t eat your chicken.  It would be a real shame if something happened to Doggie.  No one would want that.”

 

“Wow, this is quite a mess in here.  It better be clean when I come back, or Bunny gets it.”

 

“I’ve got an idea.  Let’s brush your hair and get ready to go.”

“But, I don’t want to!”

“We can brush it while you’re sitting in time out.  Would you like that?  Huh?”

In the Earbuds: Young Hearts by BUNT. (feat. BEGINNERS)

This song, Young Hearts, is infectious.

The honky-tonk piano and synth trumpet create a strong urge to smile.  Life affirming and empowering lyrics.  There’s another non-remix version out there which is equally delightful.  This song eventually hooked me because I heard it repeatedly in a Spotify ad.  Don’t listen to Spotify?  Try it! www.Spotify.com.  You can hear virtually every song in the world on demand.  Except Tool for some reason.  You can hear me on Spotify, though!  Take a listen to my playlist.

Self-Aware Bathroom Faucets

The Pitfalls of Modern Life

Technology is a wonderful thing, without a doubt. The advances are mind-blowing. Who would have thought that my phone could have more processing power than the NSA of 1965?* However, I’ve come to realize there are challenges with our advancing technology. Some people think we are more prone to look at a screen now than talk to an actual person. I don’t really care about that, but this is what I do care about: we are in the awkward adolescence before all commodities become self-aware, and that can lead to great confusion and suffering.
For example, the other day I walked directly into a door and smashed my face. I assumed it was an automatic door, because every reputable place has one. It was not. I need to tell me wife to get with the program at our house.
Furthermore, I can’t count how many hours I have wasted holding my hands under a bathroom faucet waiting for the water to come out, only to find it was one of those antique models with a handle (HAN – duhl).
I’ve hit 10 pedestrians with my Tesla because the auto-pilot feature wasn’t working. The judge explained that not all car companies have auto-pilot and just because my car has a “T” on it doesn’t mean it is a Tesla. It’s people like this judge that don’t appreciate the difficulty of living in these modern times.
If the robots want to come and take my job, that’s fine with me. I look forward to the A.I. consummation when I can sit at home in my easy chair all day with drones scanning my stomach to sense hunger and buzz over to drop Cheez-Its in my mouth.

*This fact still pending verification

In the Earbuds: Insurgentes by Steven Wilson

A solo album from the former front-man of Porcupine Tree, Insurgentes is spacey, moody, unpredictable, powerful, and engrossing. Wilson’s Pink-Floyd-meets-90’s-hard rock vibe has soft, almost monotone vocal melodies overtop brooding, spooky clean guitars, followed by chunky rock riffs battering your cranium. The melodies themselves are simple, but enchanting, especially on the closing song – a gentle piano ballad. I’d recommend this for fans of prog, but even fans of alternative rock could find something to suit them. Great stuff!

Matt Bankert Live!

Matt Bankert Digitally Live

I am planning to play a digital acoustic concert via live stream over the Internet!  As far as the time and content of the concert, I would love nothing more than to give the people what they want.  But I don’t know what they want!  If you’d like to see such a concert, oh person, would you please tell me what you would prefer?  Just click below!

survey1

 

Stay tuned for my announcement on when the concert will be. I hope you can tune in!

In the Earbuds: “Paranormal” by Alice Cooper

These days seem to be a renaissance of veteran rockers returning to make new and really good music (see Museletters 4, 8, 9 for reviews of Metallica, Ray Davies, Van Halen, and Matthew Sweet). This is the 127th (give or take 100) studio album by the original shock-rocker and evangelical Christian, Alice Cooper.  Although he turns 70 next month, Cooper and his signature snarl are as visceral as ever. These songs are gripping and powerful with attractive melodies.  There is a spooky Trans-Siberian vibe on the title track and hyped-up Hendrix riffs on “Dead Flies.” “Rats” sounds like a deranged and enraged Chuck Berry howling out a low view of humanity.  A “love” song only Alice Cooper could write, “Fallen in Love (And I Can’t Get Up),” has a great ZZ Top blues rhythm – so much so, they had to get Billy Gibbons himself to play guitar on it.

 There is an Iggy and the Stooges kind of sound on “Private Public Breakdown” and “You and all your friends.”  The production is polished and punchy. This album is hard to stop listening to.  Highly recommended!

You can hear the spotlight on Alice cooper on my latest playlist on Spotify: “Give Me Liberty and Give Me Rock

Museletter # 10: Everything You Say Sounds Stupid

New Song: Enlighten Me

Here it is, an acoustic demo of a brand new song, Enlighten Me:

Enlighten Me acoustic video

Enlighten Me acoustic video

I plan to make a more rockin’ version eventually, so stay tuned.  I would love to hear what you think!

Sale Still Going!

Don’t miss out!  The $5 sale on my music at CDBaby.com is still going on for a limited time – agh, I can only keep this salesman stuff up for so long.  Just buy my music if you want to.  $5 for 11 songs!

In the Earbuds: Revolution Radio by Green Day

Green Day is a household name in the “alternative rock” world (whatever “alternative” means) almost 30 years into their career.  What person learning guitar hasn’t prioritized memorizing one of Green Day’s power chord-riddled hits like Longview or Welcome to Paradise?  (I know I have.)  With Revolution Radio they show that they can still belt out the catchy tunes with punk rock velocity.  Billie Joe’s lyrics were never fully juvenile, but these lyrics here are more profound, more meaningful.  Themes of social unrest and current events.  Standout tracks are Bang, Bang, Troubled Times, title track, and Youngblood.  But they’re all pretty good.

To Err is Human… I am Definitely Human

Send In The Tanks – the Bloopers!

You know when you are practicing something and you mess up a lot of times before you get it right?  Well, if you really need a lesson in humility, I recommend hitting record on a camera while you are practicing so you can capture your mistakes for eternity.  Thanks to this outtake video I just posted, I am the humblest man ever:

tanks outtakes vid thumbnail

I think it turned out kind of amusing.

In the Earbuds: Matthew Sweet, Tomorrow Forever

Matthew Sweet is one of those rock artists whose work from a bygone era (the 90s in Sweet’s case) is burned in my mind, although they have been steadily releasing music unknown to me.  Sweet is known for his hit radio songs “Girlfriend”, “Sick of my Myself”, and he is still very much here with his 12th album, Tomorrow Forever.  It’s terrific.

There are some hard rockers (Pretty Please), some slow ballads (Haunted), and plenty of feel-good guitar pop songs (Trick, Music for Love).  I love the bluesy, surfy beat to “the Searcher”.  The beat throbs under a mildly sung verse until the chorus kicks in with Matthew yelling in your face “You still can’t see!”

Matthew Sweet’s strong suits are stronger than ever here:

  1. His ability to write catchy, but tasteful, fresh melodies.
  2. His penchant for hiring astounding lead guitarists to noodle all the way through his songs – Jason Victor and John Moreman compete for who can melt more faces.
  3. He may be among the best background vocalists out there.  That is, he always knows exactly when to place a nice “Oooo” or “Ahhh” to compliment the song, and the small army of overdubbed Matthews in the background just couldn’t sound any more harmonious.

The album is sure to delight Matthew Sweet fans, and even those new to him who just enjoy well-written songs that feel good going down.  More background on the album can be found here.

The Show

I had the privilege of seeing Matthew Sweet and band at the Rams Head Tavern in Annapolis recently on the Tomorrow Forever tour, and came away completely fulfilled.  There were slain-by-the-Spirit guitar solos from Jason Victor, Paul Chastain was solid on bass, and Ric Menck just pounded the drums into drum powder (he’s been playing with Sweet since the “Girlfriend” album in 1991!).  Matthew sounded strong on vocals and rhythm guitar, and ably performed all the hits as well as a healthy dose of the new songs: Trick, Pretty Please (maybe my favorite from the new album), Music for Love, the Searcher.  I’m sad they didn’t do “Entangled,” among the strongest of his new songs, but I guess they couldn’t play forever.

I’ve been so excited about Matthew Sweet lately, that he has made his debut on my Spotify playlist, “Give Me Liberty and Give Me Rock.”  Give it a listen.

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Suspicious Skin Color (New video!)

Send In The Tanks – OFFICIAL Music Video

Proudly presenting, the official video for my new single, Send In The Tanks!

I had the idea to record this song in such a way as to entwine audio and visual.  In addition, I get tired of spending a lot of time in the editing process for song mixes, tweaking and splicing takes to make the best parts shine through.  To these two ends, here is what I did for Send In The Tanks:

  • I used my camcorder to video-record each audio take for each instrument track (that’s what you’re seeing in the official video)
  • Each music track in the final mix is a single, uncut performance.  I did no splices or “punching-in/out” for each take.  (Sadly, there are a few times where a note or two is off and it could have benefited from a little redo.  But I stuck to my guns and kept it in there.)

I thought I could save on editing time by doing only uncut takes.  This was achieved.  However, because I’m not the best performer, I ended up having to do a boatload of single takes to get one that was workable.  Backfire!

I suppose now is as a good a time as any to tell you about…

A collection of new songs!

I have a collection songs incubating of which “Send In The Tanks” is the first.  I thought this whole video/audio single take thing would be a cool theme for all the songs.  However, it ended up being pretty time-consuming, and I don’t think I’ll continue it for all the songs.  The songs are in varying trimesters of gestation, and the one that is closest the term is “Enlighten Me.”  Expect to see a demo on that one soon!  Another song you should expect to see soon is “Shirley, You Must Be Joking.”

All these songs have a common thread of anti-authority, anti-politics, anti-establishment, etc.  – those themes are not often sung about in in rock n’ roll, so someone has to!  And I know every singer who has ever sung says this, but I’m really excited about these new songs!

I’m not sure yet how I will release this collection.  I may try crowdfunding.  Who knows!

In The Earbuds: Drones by Muse

The symphonic-glam-experimental-art-synth-arena-hard rock band Muse has done it again with Drones.  Continuing their railing against the global power structures, this appropriately-titled album has a common theme of, well, drones.  The word “drone” probably elicits the idea of an unmanned aircraft used in the Middle East wars. Some songs address that definition (Reapers), but the album takes different meanings of the word drone and applies them to the situation of the West’s foreign interventions and intervention domestically.

Musically, the album is heavy on the rock riffs (Reapers, The Handler, Defector, Psycho).  This is a welcome characteristic.  Expect to get your skull pounded by an amalgam of Radiohead and Black Sabbath.  On the other hand, Drones still tests the limits enough to remind you it’s a Muse album – the 10 minute prog song “Globalist”, the Prince-esque pop of “Dead Inside”, and the acapella choir sounds of the title track.

These are the strongest tunes from Muse in a while, well worth your attention.

Coming attractions

  • Twitter contest
  • Enlighten Me acoustic demo
  • Surprise cover song!

Send In The Tanks Around The World

Send In The Tanks – the Single!

My new song, “Send In The Tanks” has been mixed and mastered and released to digital worldwide distribution!

Send in the tanks

Buy it now wherever fine music (obviously) is sold (iTunes, Amazon, etc.)!  You can also stream it on Spotify if you don’t like commitment (I’m a guy, so I understand that.  Am I right, ladies?).

(More parentheses here.)

If you dig it, here are a few ways you could help that would go a long way:

  • Write a review on iTunes, Amazon, etc.
  • Save it to your library on Spotify
  • Follow my Matt Bankert artist page on Spotify
  • Add it to a Spotify playlist
  • Share it with your friends, enemies, and everyone in between

I am most grateful!

When they said you could do whatever you want, they never meant you could do that.”

In the Earbuds: A Different Kind of Truth by Van Halen

Many old-timer bands try to do a revamp album after being inactive for a while.  Few succeed.  Van Halen succeeded.  It’s been out for a few years now (since 2012), but the reunion album of the classic Van Halen lineup including David Lee Roth is a triumph.  Despite Roth’s voice showing some age, he can still belt out some eye-popping high notes.  Roth’s girl-crazy lyrics now have a degree of profundity and wit to them (Bullethead, Tattoo) that may not have been there in the more classic, less-philosophical Van Halen tunes (Hot For Teacher).  The rhythm section hasn’t lost any speed and if anything, has picked up some steam with the addition of Eddie’s own son, Wolfgang, on bass.  This means the band is now 25% more Van Halen.  Wolfgang has definitely inherited his father’s snaking fretboard gene (pardon the technical medical term).  Some highlights are the speed rock songs “As Is”, “Bullethead”, and “China Town”, as well as the raucous, heavy blues-rocker, “Stay Frosty”.

But of course the highlight of the album is the band’s namesake, Eddie Van Halen.  His scorching, serpentine riffs and solos are just as strong as anything from the late 70s.  Eddie is one of my favorite guitarists, because he sounds like a child with his favorite toy. You can hear in his music that signature smile he always has on his face.  His playing appears to be effortless.  He gives a command, and his guitar is helpless to obey – snarling, singing, crying, trilling, or bellowing in response.

Listen to this and you’ll be smiling like Eddie.

 

===Follow Matt’s Spotify playlist, “Give Me Liberty and Give Me Rock,” updated weekly!===

One Nation Under Mammon

Economic Stimulus Blues – Fun Facts!

Then it comes to learning, watching a movie is so much better than reading a book. There tend to be more pictures and less words. You don’t have to move your head while reading over sentences – you can keep it stationary as the images assault your optic nerves. That’s why I am pleased to present a long running project I’ve finally completed, a “fun facts” video for my song Economic Stimulus Blues. Please share and subscribe!

In the Earbuds: Ray Davies, Americana

The Kinks are, I think, in the US a largely unknown treasure of music. They are a treasure in no small part due to the rich, thoughtful, witty, and personal songwriting of their front-man, the recently knighted Ray Davies. In Americana, Ray joins the legend and ideals of the America he heard about from across the pond in England as a boy with the real America he visited while touring with the Kinks as an adult. The songs are strong for the most part, with a rootsy blend of primal blues (Mystery Room, Change for Change), country (Americana), and rock (the Great Highway). While the Kinks waxed nostalgic about England in the 60s (Village Green Preservation), here Ray waxes nostalgic over an American era not much earlier than the 60s. But it’s not just about yesteryear for Ray, it’s about an attitude going forward: “Americana is not so much about the country or even about the style of music [even though it is those things – MB]. It represents hope for a better future as the dream continues along the great highway.” From the song, “The Great Highway:”

At a juke box in a smoky bar
A girl stands looking at the stars
Dressed in denim wearing shades
And outside is the The Great Highway
(I had this dream, America)
She sips a coke, walks away
It’s just a second in a day
But all her culture’s on display
She might be a dreamer
But maybe I’m a dreamer, too

An idealized romanticization of American values and culture from a bygone era, Americana is a real treat to hear. If we don’t knight people here in the US, maybe we can find some room for Sir Ray on Mt. Rushmore.

Coming soon…

  • Send in the Tanks, the single! Complete and waiting for upload to the world
  • Send in the Tanks, the video! Half-complete