Friday, December 28, 2007

Christmas Praise

The Tone King gave a real lovely write-up about the holiday song "It's Christmas". Read the full post here.

Today I'd like to share some regional finds. Starting in the north, from Minneapolis, MN we have Mercurial Rage. This is a Christmas song they shared on their My Space page, so I don't believe it has been released on a CD. Their influences range from Joy Division, Bauhaus, The Psychedelic Furs, A Flock of Seagulls, and among others. It adds up to a very nice sound, and great original Christmas tune.


Be sure to link over and thank him in the comments!

Mercurial Rage LIVE This Saturday 12/29 @ The Turf Club

Turf Club Holiday Dance Party Revolution w/ So it Goes, The Mood Swings, and Farewell Circuit!

This is guaranteed to be a night filled with debauched mirth and Baccanalian merriment.

Farewell Circuit at 9:30
Mercurial Rage at 10:30
So it Goes at 11:30
The Mood Swings at 12:30

Saturday, December 29, 2007 at 9:00pm
The Turf Club
1601 University Ave
St Paul, MN 55104

We look forward to seeing you there. Clothing is optional.

Love,
The Rage

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

LIVE 12/29 The Turf Club

Mercurial Rage live at the Turf Club
Turf Club Holiday Dance Party Revolution w/ So it Goes, The Mood Swings, and Farewell Circuit!

Saturday, December 29, 2007 at 9:00pm
The Turf Club
1601 University Ave
St Paul, MN 55104

Love

TheRage

PS-If you have not downloaded the Mercurial Rage holiday song "It's Christmas" please do so within the next 6 days :)

Friday, December 14, 2007

Christmas Song FREE Download!!!

Rage Heads,

We are proud to announce that we have written, recorded, and posted a Christmas Song as a FREE Download!!! The song is titled "It's Christmas" and we hope that listening to it brings you as much holiday cheer as it did for us to record it.

So simply click on our MySpace page and Download (FOR FREE) the limited edition Mercurial Rage song "It's Christmas" from now until December 26th!!!

Lastly, please check out our events calender, and note that our next show is on 12/29 at the Turf Club with So it Goes and The Mood Swings. This is also a show in which Peter Anderson will be joining us as a special guest on the Drums! We will keep you posted on the details as they arise.

Happy Holidays!

Love

TheRage

Monday, December 03, 2007

The Strange Lights - A Must See Band!!!

RageHeads,

If you have yet to see The Strange Lights in encourage you to do so ASAP.

www.myspace.com/thestrangelights

Love

TheRage

Saturday, November 17, 2007

Mercurial Rage Live in Chicago Tonight!

Dearest Chi-Town Lovers,

Mercurial Rage will be returning to Chicago this Saturday (11/17) at Goose Island to play a show with our dearest Windy City friends The Dundrearies, along with White Buffalo is Born! We will be hitting the stage around 11:00pm, but we encourage you to get there early to have some pre-show cocktails with us. If you are not from the Chicagoland area but know of people who reside there, we would greatly appreciate your help letting them know about TheRage.

Love Always

TheRage
www.mercurialrage.com

Goose Island
3535 N Clark St
Chicago, Illinois 60657

White Buffalo is Born (Opener)
Mercurial Rage
Dundrearies (Headliner)

Thursday, November 08, 2007

Rock Show!

Mercurial Rage would like to announce our triumphant return to the Uptown Bar Saturday, November 10, 2007. We will be sharing the stage with Mankato's very own Austin Scarlet, Post Punk New Wave masters Maps of Norway, and to top it off ZibraZibra will be spreading their musical mastery all around the club. If you have not seen any of these bands, I guarantee you will NOT be disappointed. Showtime is at 9:30pm, and TheRage will be hitting the stage at precisely 11:30pm.

Secondly, we would appreciate your support on requesting songs from the Funeral Sessions to be played on 89.3 The Current. Please use the below link and request your favorite song from the album.

http://www.publicradio.org/applications/formbuilder/user/form_display.php?form_code=e7d78b6c2e2d

Lastly, if you have yet to purchase the Funeral Sessions, it is available on iTunes, CD Baby, Napster and copious amounts of other digital formats. Simply Google Mercurial Rage and pick your favorite place to purchase the record.

Also if you have yet to purchase the critically acclaimed split 7inch with Belgium's very own Velvet Underwear, you can purchase one from us, or at http://mplsltd.com/music/.

We thank you so much for your support and we look very much forward to seeing you on Saturday night!!!

Love

TheRage
www.mercurialrage.com

Mercurial Rage Live at the Uptown Bar
Uptown Bar
3018 Hennepin Ave
Minneapolis, MN 55408
(612) 823-4719
Cost $5.00

Austin Scarlet 9:30pm
Maps of Norway 10:30pm
Mercurial Rage 11:30pm
ZibraZibra 12:30pm

Monday, October 08, 2007

Ragefest

After taking the month of September off from gigging, the boys of Mercurial Rage were back, headlining the Oktoberfestivities at Club Jager. Michael DiGreggario also did an interview with J Francis Radio. Missed the broadcast? For a limited time you can still listen. Check out the Radio Tower and click on "Fri Oct 5 Prt 2".

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Listening Lounge

Mercurial Rage and DJ Christian Fritz will be joining Todd Melby on KFAI's program Listening Lounge this coming Monday, September 17th, at 7 p.m. Central Time, for a full 30 minutes!

Saturday, September 01, 2007

Give Thanks

It's not just good manners to thank people for a job well done. It also creates a sense of goodwill and encourages continued focus on the subject for which they're being thanked. So thank the soundman at the Fine Line when he gives Mercurial Rage the best sound they've yet had. Thank Ed Ackerson for a fantastic surprise performance of Judas Priest's "Living After Midnight" during the extremely rockin' Melismatics set. Thank the fan that that sought out the Rage boys for their autograph after the show.

And what about the radio? The piece from "The World" is now archived. Be sure to thank the show via theworld@pri.org for supporting the Super Split Singles Club. Contact Minnesota Public Radio to thank them for airing "The World" and to request that they play Mercurial Rage on The Current. Thank Todd Melby melby@bitstream.net for doing the story and choosing Mercurial Rage as the local Minneapolis band to focus on.

Thank the KFAI program MN Soundtrack MNSoundtrack@gmail.com for playing The Funeral Sessions last week. Thank the Radio K program Off the Record for choosing Mercurial Rage as their Local Kebut in July and to request that they continue to support them with additional airings of other songs.

And thanks to you for helping to spread the music of Merc Rage across the airwaves!

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

A Fine Evening

Cake! Butch McQueen surprised Chris Church with a birthday cake at the Kitty Cat Klub. There was even a lovely audience singalong of Happy Birthday in the middle of the set on Saturday night. Shout out to birthday girl Amanda, too! There most likely won't be any frosting-covered festivities at the Fine Line on Thursday (on stage at least) but it will definitely be a dancetastic show! Come down!

Fine Line Music Café
August 30, 2007
The Melismatics
White Light Riot
Mercurial Rage

Doors 8pm
Music 9pm
$5 Cover

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

mpls ltd takes over The World!!

Public Radio International's "The World" did a Global Hit segment about the mpls ltd super split singles club. It should be airing sometime this week - probably Wednesday at 7pm. DJ Christian Fritz, members of Estonia's Tartu Popi ja Roki Instituut, Belgium's Velvet Underwear, and Minneapolis' own Mercurial Rage were all interviewed for this story!

Find out where you can catch "The World" locally: Stations

After the story airs, you will be able to access the story directly on the Global Hit archive.

Keep watching this space for more details as they become available.

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Weekend of Rawk!

This Saturday is Chris Church's birthday! There are not one but two chances to celebrate with him. The Rage will be making their way down to Mankato for a Friday night show and playing here in Minneapolis on Saturday. Strap on your dancin' shoes!

What's Up Lounge
08-24-2007 | Austin Scarlett
w/ So It Goes, Mercurial Rage, Capitol Sons, Accident Waiting To Happen
$6 | 6 PM | All Ages

Kitty Cat Klub
25 SAT 9PM $5
Landing Gear
Mercurial Rage
The Dundrearies (Chicago, Il)

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Video Star



Do you have any camera or cell phone video of Mercurial Rage in concert? Upload it to YouTube! Check out this snippet from April, 2006.

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

World News

Tonight Mercurial Rage was going to convene at the swank loft apartment of Butch McQueen to record an interview for BBC World radio. And then tragedy struck. Clearly the journalist had another story to cover. Our hearts go out to all those that were injured and lost loved ones. Please check in here so we know that you're OK.

Or come down to Clubhouse Jager on Friday to see everyone in person!

Aug 3 2007 10:00P
Free live music w/MERCURIAL RAGE & SO IT GOES!!!

Friday, July 27, 2007

How was the show?

Are you going down to see Mercurial Rage play at the Triple Rock tonight? Afterwards, try visiting the forums at How Was the Show and offering your opinion of the performance!



There are great reviews on the site, too, like this one of the fabulous England Swings show in May. Check them out and spend some time learning about the vibrant Minneapolis/St. Paul music scene!

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Mr. Rock n Roll

Once upon a time, Chris Church was in a band called Lunar 9 ("good pop music for riding around in a UFO" -- Chris Strouth). This band had a gig at a local bar but Chris Church had a problem. He had an abscessed tooth. Seeing as how it was a holiday weekend, the emergency dentist did not give him a full root canal, instead prescribing Vicodin. Chris Church played the gig anyway and ended up earning the nickname Mr. Rock n Roll.

Chris Church will once again be playing a show on Vicodin (this time prescribed for cellulitis). Come see Mr. Rock n Roll and the rest of the lads at the Turf Club, this Friday at 9pm!

Friday, July 27, 2007

Revolver Modele
Mercurial Rage
The Lonely H
A Night in the Box

9:00 | $5

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Mercurial Rage Meet Chicago

Did you miss the big Spring 2007 Merc Rage gig in Chicago? Wish you could have gone? Don't fret, here's some pics of the lads goofing with the Space Hooker. She was kind enough to put them up during their stay.

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

On The Record

Originally published July 6-19, 2007 in Lavender Magazine, Issue 316. Story by Ed Huyck.



The Funeral Sessions
Mercurial Rage

Ah, the ’80s. A time of bad hair, worse fashions, and lots of interesting musical subgenres. Local artists Mercurial Rage purvey icy-cold European synth pop à la New Order or Depeche Mode. Yet while the band draws its influence on these long-ago sounds throughout their first mini-CD, The Funeral Sessions, they also update the sound with some modern attitude and toss in plenty of their own touches.

Vocalist Michael DiGreggario shows plenty of soul in his voice, showcasing the mix of romance, hurt, and even menace in Chris Hill’s lyrics. The balance of the band—Christopher Church, Brock Landers, and Butch McQueen—draft music that is familiar for longtime listeners of the genre, but also has a welcome freshness about it.

The band hits its stride on the driving “Simon” and especially on the moody “I Sold My Soul.” The band is still on its early footing here, but these six tracks show a group that doesn’t just want to turn back the clock, they want to bring back the past. In this case, it’s a welcome whiff of nostalgia.

Monday, July 16, 2007

Reaching for a Star Star

Have you watched the new Mercurial Rage video for their song "Star Star" off their CD The Funeral Sessions? Don't be shy, leave a comment!



Written & performed by Mercurial Rage / Album: The Funeral Sessions / Editor: Vince Caro / Cameras: Drew Hill, Andy Iwanin, Moon Wells, V. Caro

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Mercury Rising

Mercurial Rage heat up the dance floor with '80s synth-pop


Originally published June 27, 2007 in the City Pages. Story by Sarah Askari.

A sunglasses-wearing Michael Di'Greggario has just finished informing the two newest members of Mercurial Rage of the shocking connection between Christopher Church (seated) and Meatloaf
Image by Tony Nelson



Mercurial Rage
The Funeral Sessions
Rage 01

The Roman god Mercury is well known for his benevolent oversight of bouquet delivery, but less so for his patronage of danceable synth-pop. That may soon change. A new EP by Minneapolis foursome Mercurial Rage pays tribute to the immortal messenger god, and to the band's decidedly mortal sources of artistic inspiration.

"New Order, Depeche Mode—we're trying to pay homage to our childhoods," explains singer Michael Di'Greggario when I visit the lads Mercurial at their practice space near the municipal impound lot. Earlier in the week, coincidently, the long-suspected death of New Order was confirmed in the media.

Di'Greggario has a smile like the Joker and a puckish anglo-'fro. (The rococo surname, by the way, replaces "Grey," which actually could work on the stage in a half-assed way; imagine if his first name was Dove, for instance.) He spent years pushing caffeine to undergrads at a Dinkytown coffee shop with the other Mercurial Rage principal, Christopher Church. ("Christopher Church" is the alter ego of Chris Hill; he is listed in the band roster under his assumed name, but the liner notes of Funeral Sessions credit him for the lyrics under his real name, prompting this reporter to ask, "Why are all of your lyrics written by some guy who's not even in the band?" Part of the answer involved a very rewarding detour into the career arc of Meatloaf, and may possibly be made available as a web-only extra.)

Church, with his washed-out aqua shirt and white trousers, is like a Midwesterner made worldly—but uncorrupted!—by a few years in Miami. And in his downplayed, English-major way, the 34-year-old bassist is the soul of the band. When they all sit for a photo later in the interview, the other members notice lint on his shirt, and three pairs of hands reach out simultaneously to groom him. Three-fourths of the band is from Sioux Falls, South Dakota, a place that Church compares to "a suburb with no city attached to it. We still always knew about the fun bands, and we'd rent out the basement of the Nordic Hall for shows."

Here in Minneapolis, Church had been in groups "that dissolved right after we started to get good," he says, "before we had a chance to put anything out." But what began as a two-man operation, with Di'Greggario and Church writing songs on synthesizer, has blossomed, with the addition of Butch McQueen (better known as local producer and TV Sound guitarist Brandon Delida) and keyboardist Brock Landers (b. Specht).

The Funeral Sessions is six songs' worth of gloomy electronic missives from your romantically complicated year abroad. Hollow drum-machine beats mark the time between first making eye contact and making out on the dance floor, while bass lines throb with the next morning's regrets. Di'Greggario sings reproaches to characters seeking solace in false embraces—with the pursuit of fame, with clubbing every night, with devil women who offer sex but steal your soul. Yet these tunes can't bring themselves to practice abstinence. Instead, they delight in the skittery, ever-changing rush of digitalized distortion, popping one electronic effect after another for a high that's always shifting shapes.

This makes the band computer a sort-of honorary member, albeit one that has a hard time getting respect when they set up their equipment for shows here in rock-prejudiced Mill City. "Everything that's drums and preprogrammed keyboards is on an Apple," Di'Greggario says.

"Sometimes the sound guys get mad that you don't have a drummer," interrupts Church, "but then they start to like it when they don't have to put down eight mics for the drum set."

The lack of a drummer isn't the only thing that draws looks—the nattily dressed band cultivates an omnisexual mystique that serves their aesthetic orientation, if not their true sexual orientation. "I want to put on a Depeche Mode arena rock show—people chuckle at first, but then they get it," Di'Greggario explains. "It's an androgynous performance, like an Hacienda party kind of vibe"—a reference to the famous Manchester club depicted in 24 Hour Party People.

Their original first choice for a band name was going to reflect their camp sensibility. "We were going to be called 'Fashion!'" says Church regretfully, "but another band had already taken it." Perhaps the Roman god of atrocious monikers mercifully decided not to further burden a town that has to deal with the Electric Fetus.

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Local Action

Originally published June 28, 2007 in the Pioneer Press, by Ross Raihala.


Break out the eyeliner Saturday when Mercurial Rage introduces its debut album, "The Funeral Sessions," at the Uptown Bar with First Communion Afterparty and So It Goes. They play sleek, retro electronic rock, with lead singer Michael Di'Greggario channeling Depeche Mode's David Gahan (and maybe a little Martin Gore, as well).

CD Release

Originally published June 27, 2007 in The Pulse, by Mitchell Houle.




The Funeral Sessions!!! All hype and hypnotech heads will be bobbing, dancing, and supporting … Mercurial Rage at the Uptown Bar this Saturday, June 30, who will be sharing the stage with So it Goes and First Communion Afterparty. If you didn’t grow up in the eighties, hike back a few years progressively with Mercurial Rage, who elegantly delve into your soul unlike most electronica-experimental music, which may precipitate your need for an exorcism. This much-anticipated CD release means you should prepare your CD Player and mp3 players, for we promise the Funeral Sessions will be on your heavy rotation. Saturday, June 30 at 8 p.m. $5. Uptown Bar 3018 Hennepin Ave., Mpls.

Back to Back Shows

Originally published on June 15, 2007 in The Pulse, by Dwight Hobbes.




Mercurial Rage hasn’t been at it together all that long-–about a year. Nonetheless, they know what they are doing. They are at their best on a cut like “Simon,” combining smart-ass attitude with a hip-slung groove that dares you not to dance. These boys have an EP, The Funeral Sessions--cleanly produced, alive with energy-–that should generate a following. Especially considering after Mercurial Rage are done playing this weekend. Today (June 15) they’re at The Hexagon Bar, 2600 27th Ave. S., Mpls., at 9 p.m. On Saturday, June 16, they’re at The Triple Rock Social Club on Minneapolis’ West Bank, at 8 p.m.

Added to which, come June 30, The Funeral Sessions gets its release event at the Uptown Bar, 3018 Hennepin Ave., Mpls., at 9 p.m.

Monday, July 09, 2007

The freaks come out at night...naked!

Minneapolis glam-rock outfit Mercurial Rage proves that they're not only the mood music, but the foreplay, the sex and the cigarette after

Originally published June 27, 2007 in the MN Daily. Story by Haily Gostas.

The scenesters who shagged me: Michael Di’Greggario, Butch McQueen, Brock Landers and Chris Church exercise their right to get fabulous.


This makes like the beginning of a wham-bam white- leisure-suit-soaked exploitation film from the 1980s: By day, four dashing-but-detached gents masquerade as white-collar working stiffs; then when night falls, they rise above the proletarian pit, pay their respects to the glam-rock salaciousness that spawned them and become superheroes of sin (especially to themselves).

For the men of Mercurial Rage, their seductive brand of gothic new wave-flavored electronica is a sweet escape from sun-damaged pop music (and office confines), a chance to both enjoy and exploit an evening's indulgence in rock star debauchery by their own definition.

In fact, it's possible that their highly anticipated debut album "The Funeral Sessions" might not have even been properly finished had this bande à part not gotten down to business in the buff.

OK, so perhaps being communally unclothed won't exactly feed a starving nation or bring the troops home, but it at least helps push one such computer-heavy collection of songs into a much more 'organic' direction.

The casual listener might assume that the record's name arose from Mercurial Rage's dark and dramatic disposition, but here's a secret - it's simply because they blew up a computer at their studio and destroyed a whole lot of blood, sweat and tears.

Album producer and "Fifth Beatle" figure Mykl Westbrooks exclaimed the minor disaster was a "freakin' funeral," so Mercurial Rage responded in the only way they knew how. Birthday suits were donned, the energy shifted to 'just right' and the music came freely and easily. Eventually, the band managed to reconstruct all they had lost in under a day, and thank God for it.

"The Funeral Sessions" is precisely the sort of album to get naked to, a six-song sample from Mercurial Rage's live set list that details a shadowy city underbelly of the fashionable and fame-hungry, of the dirty minds and all their disillusioned questions.

"The record sounds exactly how we wanted it to," beamed bassist and primary song arranger Chris Church (appropriately deemed the band's "architect").

"It's something people who come to our shows can finally have and hold on to."
According to Church, it has taken Mercurial Rage three years to become the outfit they are today. After meeting and subsequently bonding with velvet-voiced frontman Michael Di'Greggario while they both helped manage the Dinkytown Espresso Royale, the BFFs decided to pool their musical tastes into one very sexy beast - a little bit of Joy Division here, a little Primal Scream there, lots of New Order, even more Depeche Mode, and a dash of Suede to top it all off.

Though they intended to storm the Minneapolis music scene as a duo (and without any actual instruments to boot), Church and Di'Greggario eventually added keyboardist Brock Landers and guitarist Butch McQueen to their lineup, debuting the fully fleshed-out chemistry experiment to much acclaim at the Dinkytowner in July 2005.

Three-fourths of Mercurial Rage's brotherhood (bound by their penchant for very tight trousers) originally hails from Sioux Falls, S.D., where older brothers' bedrooms were wall-to-wall with punk posters and responsible for the first stirrings of "Hey-I-wanna-be-in-a-band-too" enthusiasm.

Di'Greggario, a self-described former theater and choir nerd, was five when his particular nearest and dearest snuck him the Ace Frehley solo record. He put it on his Fischer Price record player, used his tennis racket as an axe and never looked back.

"After that, I envisioned playing in front of the masses," he said. "It's just something I've always wanted."

Meanwhile, Church and Landers (who had never played keyboards prior to Mercurial Rage) were dabbling in harder, more sinister sounds that perfectly encapsulated their teenage angst. Where Di'Greggario brings a sense of tortured showmanship, they bring the gloom that cushions it.

McQueen describes his own musical blossoming through three different ages: He was deaf until he was three and a half; he asked his parents for a piano when he was seven; and by eight years old, in 1984, he had won a Minnesota state piano championship.

"I knew after playing in front of 5,000 people that the rest of my life was going to be about music," McQueen explained.

Prior to Mercurial Rage's conception, he involved himself in a host of projects, including 36 Headshots and the TV Sound, and presently he sharpens the band's high-gloss approach with his time-honored shredding skills.

Despite any other musical commitments (and their respective 9-to-5s), each insists on making Mercurial Rage their prerogative, and such laborious efforts are obvious in "The Funeral Sessions."

"Where our shows are more 'rock,' the record sounds recorded, but in a good way," defends Landers. "It's lush and gorgeous, but the show is actually alive. We give you the option to pick what you prefer."

Still, a note to all skeptics who might lean toward the former - a Mercurial Rage performance is not simply a press-play affair. They recreate every bit of what's on the record, all fat club beats and cocksure attitude, ribbed for your pleasure. Those you see clinging to the wall, allowing nothing more than a head nod in their direction? They are precisely who Mercurial Rage hopes to join, conquer and help get freaky.

"We want to take ourselves seriously, but we aren't afraid to be uninhibited," said the ever-agile Di'Greggario, prone to popping buttons and popping like it's hot. "It's pretty much a slow striptease, but it's what we do," he added with a laugh. "But I'm not afraid of that."

Church also stresses the importance of looking good on stage. And yes, he loves giving Di'Greggario the occasional rubdown. It's a Mick-and-Keith thing. Don't worry about it.

"We're always trying to maximize our sexiness," he said. "But while we might be successful in Minneapolis, we'd probably get beat up in St. Cloud!"

Despite all the strutting and preening, there are no false hopes of fabulous rock stardom. These boys think our fair metropolis is where it's at.

"We're fine here in Minneapolis," McQueen declared. "If something was to happen, great, but the point is just to love playing music."

Church jokes that he loathes the idea of becoming an "L.A. guy," and plans on simply buying his gargantuan mansion right here.

To Di'Greggario, the city that inspired Mercurial Rage will always be home sweet home. "It's blessed with a cornucopia of amazing artists, and it's something we're privileged to be a part of," he said. "But still, if we make it big, I'm getting my flat in France!"

And why not? Even the average Joes of the early hours deserve their decadence.