Dimitri Giannopoulos is the primary songwriter and frontman for the Boston-based band Horse Jumper of Love. Thriving on patient and uncompromising songs, evocative lyrics, and arrangements that suddenly turn from delicate to blistering, their music is full of intensity. Lance Bangs is a Portland-based filmmaker and music video director. Bangs has directed music videos for bands like Sonic Youth, Nirvana, Pavement, R.E.M, and countless others. He has also been heavily involved in the filming and production of MTV’s Jackass television series and its subsequent movies. Together, alongside the help of Bangs’ film and video production company, Field Recordings, they present Third Floor Window, a short film narrowing in on Portland and expanding on the songs of Horse Jumper of Love’s latest full-length release, Disaster Trick. The screening will also be accompanied by a solo performance from Giannopoulos as well as a conversation with Lance Bangs.
Dan Wriggins is a Philadelphia-based songwriter, musician, and poet. He grew up in the town of Yarmouth, Maine, and on Islesford, a small island community near Bar Harbor. In high school, he started playing piano and guitar, and met bandmates Michael Cormier and Peter Gill. He worked on lobster fishing boats before moving to Philadelphia and starting the alt-country band Friendship in 2015, with whom he has toured the US and Canada extensively. He lives and sometimes tours with his dog, Roy.
The EP “Mr. Chill” is Wriggins’ debut release under his own name. Michael Cormier’s minimal production is an open frame; quiet drums in a big room, classical guitar, and melodic organ lift Wriggins’ prose-poem lyrics. His solemn, wounded delivery makes lines like “you trust your gut/and your gut lies” and “read my salty lips/no new love” into deadly serious jokes. Title notwithstanding, “Mr. Chill” isn’t great background music – it’s rich and powerful, demanding attention as a profoundly moving and original work.
Wriggins explains:
“I recorded 14 songs with Brad Krieger at his beautiful studio in Lincoln, RI in October. Mike Cormier played everything but guitar, and some pizzicato plucks on “Yellow Bricks,” courtesy of brilliant pilgrim Lina Tullgren. I didn’t want any bass, so Mike found a humongous kick drum. The five songs that make up “Mr. Chill” hung together best, so I made an EP. The songs are fragmentary. Scenes and images come from memories, dreams, friends, books, lullabies, tv shows, etc. I wanted it to sound, as usual, like Kath Bloom or Vic Chesnutt. Mike was thinking of Glen Campbell. I’ve gotten “hey man, your music is so chill” a lot, and I’m like what the fuck??? I thought it was DIRE.
I wrote the song “Mr. Chill” while working for an arborist/tree care company in the Philly suburbs. The hours were long and strenuous, and like most of my friends, I was balancing full time work with writing music and playing shows. That’s where the clock-punching lyrics come from. This was a couple years ago, and I am only realizing now that “Mr. Chill” might be a Christmas song. It also reminds me of the Disney ride “It’s a Small World.” It’s the only song I’ve written so far that does not rhyme.”
Mr. Chill will be released on cassette & digital formats on March 12, 2021. The EP follows the January 14 release of two singles: “Dent” & “The Diner.”