Electric Guest is comprised of Asa Taccone, from Berkeley, California and
Cornbread (legally Matthew Compton), from Danville,Virginia. When they
play live, they pick up three friends to fill out the complex instrumentation:
Asa plays several instruments, Cornbread nearly a dozen (including, to be
fair, triangle and tambourine). Read More...
First things first: What exactly is an “Electric Guest?” A cyborg visitor? An
online travel and lodging guide? A 1950s euphemism for sex toy? Given
the retro-future vibe that runs throughout Electric Guest’s debut
album, Mondo, any of those origins would make sense…
Electric Guest vocalist, writer and co-founder Asa Taccone explains the
true life genesis of the band’s name: “When I got kicked out of high school
in Berkeley, I started hanging out at a donut shop. An older woman who
worked there was a weirdo like me, into a lot of new age-y, metaphysical
shit and before I left she told me to always remember that I was ‘an
electric guest of the universe.’ For some reason it stuck with me.” Like the
titular origin, the band and its music is a collection of people and
memories Asa has picked up along the way during his long, circuitous
journey towards completion of Mondo. This nomadic quality permeates
every one of their songs, with their symphonic structures and
unpredictable (yet never jarring) twists and turns—not to mention the
soulful vocals that guide the listener through dreamy sonic odysseys like
the near-9-minute first single “Troubleman.”
Electric Guest is comprised of Asa Taccone, from Berkeley, California and
Cornbread (legally Matthew Compton), from Danville,Virginia. When they
play live, they pick up three friends to fill out the complex instrumentation:
Asa plays several instruments, Cornbread nearly a dozen (including, to be
fair, triangle and tambourine). Both began making music from a very
young age, both initially self-taught. Cornbread began on the drums,
recalling life at 13, “I wanted to learn every metal album that I owned:
Metallica, Metal Church, Testament. I eventually started taking lessons
from this guy that worked in the lumber department of Lowes.” He quickly
became adept on the drums and toured nationwide with various bands
until he tired of the dirty gypsy lifestyle as a tour drummer, settling in Los
Angeles to work on music for commercials and movies. Asa’s start was
even less conventional, buying his first keyboard while still in elementary
school for 10 dollars from the kid who lived down the street.
While studying in College Asa’s focus was always music. He maintained a
strong relationship with his older brother who lived in Los Angeles, playing
him his songs over the phone. His brother wanted a friend who worked in
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music to hear Asa’s material and placed him on the phone one day,
facilitating Asa’s fortuitous first encounter with Brian Burton (better known
as Danger Mouse of Gnarls Barkley, Broken Bells, Rome and producer of
The Black Keys, Gorillaz, U2, Beck and others). Danger Mouse liked what
he heard and asked Asa to keep sending him stuff. Asa of course obliged,
the two gradually forging a strong working relationship. Then one day –
June 10 of 2007 to be exact (Asa remembers “because it was the last
episode of the Sopranos” which he thought was just OK), Danger Mouse suggested they make a record together.
Having moved to Los Angeles by then, Asa, as to be expected of an L.A.-
based young artist, moved east into a large house with several other
musicians (the exact number changing daily… but the guy who slept in
the tent out back was a constant), providing him with expansive mental
and physical space. He made music nonstop, writing over a hundred
songs (like Tupac) in his three-year stay. It was also during this time that he
met his musical counterpart, Cornbread. The two instantly hit it off and
musical collaboration came naturally. Together, with the help of Danger
Mouse, they revisited and revised Asa’s many tracks, eventually whittling
the number down to a realistic 10 songs that comprise Electric Guest’s
debut album.
One journalist described their music as “a mutant-albeit somewhat
cleaned up and electronic-60’s garage thing,” likening the sound to The
Troggs, The Seeds, and The Zombies. Cornbread admits that those bands
were a great influence on him but their inspirations are impossible to nail
down as they both appreciate every genre of music, both having worked
for years on various projects. With such an eclectic mix of instruments and
influences, it’s hard to nail down the sound of Electric Guest but Asa insists
that it’s ultimately pop music, disclosing, “I have a sweet tooth for terrible
music so I won’t even say what I’m influenced by.” (He’s most likely
referring to the top ten songs on iTunes).
With the band recently signed to Downtown Records and
readying Mondo for release in spring 2012, the public will soon be able to
take in the album’s wealth of different influences, rhythms, moods and
textures and draw their own conclusions.
For updates on Mondo’s release date as well as upcoming live dates
check back regularly at electricguest.com.