
A Beginner's Mind: Limited 'Pumpkin Head' Orange Vinyl LP
A Beginnerâs Mind began when the two musicians and Asthmatic Kitty labelmates decamped to a friendâs cabin in upstate New York for a monthlong songwriting sabbatical. Watching a movie to unwind after each dayâs work, they soon found their songs reflecting the films and began investigating this connection in earnest.
The resulting album is 14 songs (loosely) based on (mostly) popular filmsâhighbrow, lowbrow and everything in between. They wrote in tandemâone person writing a verse, the other a chorus, churning out chord progressions and lyrics willy-nilly, often finishing each otherâs sentences in the process. Rigorous editing and rewriting ensued. The results are less a âcinematic exegesisâ and more a ârambling philosophical inquiryâ that allows the songs to free-associate at will. Plot-points, scene summaries, and leading characters are often displaced by esoteric interpolations that ask the bigger question: what does it mean to be human in a broken world?
Stevens and De Augustine wrote everything with a deliberate sense of shoshinâthe Zen Buddhist concept for which the record is named and an idea that empowered the pair to look for and write about unlikely inspiration without preconceived notions of what a film had to say (The I-Ching and Brian Enoâs Oblique Strategies also served as incentives along the way). The movies became rhetorical prompts, with the songwriters letting their distinct reactions and creative instincts govern their process. The underlying objective was empathy and openness, absent of judgment: to observe with the eyes of a child.
A Beginnerâs Mind began when the two musicians and Asthmatic Kitty labelmates decamped to a friendâs cabin in upstate New York for a monthlong songwriting sabbatical. Watching a movie to unwind after each dayâs work, they soon found their songs reflecting the films and began investigating this connection in earnest.
The resulting album is 14 songs (loosely) based on (mostly) popular filmsâhighbrow, lowbrow and everything in between. They wrote in tandemâone person writing a verse, the other a chorus, churning out chord progressions and lyrics willy-nilly, often finishing each otherâs sentences in the process. Rigorous editing and rewriting ensued. The results are less a âcinematic exegesisâ and more a ârambling philosophical inquiryâ that allows the songs to free-associate at will. Plot-points, scene summaries, and leading characters are often displaced by esoteric interpolations that ask the bigger question: what does it mean to be human in a broken world?
Stevens and De Augustine wrote everything with a deliberate sense of shoshinâthe Zen Buddhist concept for which the record is named and an idea that empowered the pair to look for and write about unlikely inspiration without preconceived notions of what a film had to say (The I-Ching and Brian Enoâs Oblique Strategies also served as incentives along the way). The movies became rhetorical prompts, with the songwriters letting their distinct reactions and creative instincts govern their process. The underlying objective was empathy and openness, absent of judgment: to observe with the eyes of a child.
Original: $37.94
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$13.28Description
A Beginnerâs Mind began when the two musicians and Asthmatic Kitty labelmates decamped to a friendâs cabin in upstate New York for a monthlong songwriting sabbatical. Watching a movie to unwind after each dayâs work, they soon found their songs reflecting the films and began investigating this connection in earnest.
The resulting album is 14 songs (loosely) based on (mostly) popular filmsâhighbrow, lowbrow and everything in between. They wrote in tandemâone person writing a verse, the other a chorus, churning out chord progressions and lyrics willy-nilly, often finishing each otherâs sentences in the process. Rigorous editing and rewriting ensued. The results are less a âcinematic exegesisâ and more a ârambling philosophical inquiryâ that allows the songs to free-associate at will. Plot-points, scene summaries, and leading characters are often displaced by esoteric interpolations that ask the bigger question: what does it mean to be human in a broken world?
Stevens and De Augustine wrote everything with a deliberate sense of shoshinâthe Zen Buddhist concept for which the record is named and an idea that empowered the pair to look for and write about unlikely inspiration without preconceived notions of what a film had to say (The I-Ching and Brian Enoâs Oblique Strategies also served as incentives along the way). The movies became rhetorical prompts, with the songwriters letting their distinct reactions and creative instincts govern their process. The underlying objective was empathy and openness, absent of judgment: to observe with the eyes of a child.













