There's no guide or manual for what Mystery Palace does, no easy clockwork
formula hidden in the Minneapolis-based trio's agenda. Sequenced electronics-plus-live
instruments offer a tough enough row to hoe on their own; when the former
come from a pair of heavily circuit-bent Yamaha mid-pro keyboards, opportunities
for disaster multiply exponentially.
Luckily, so do opportunities for
the sorts of disastrous successes the band enjoys regularly, largely
thanks to founder Food Team's aptitude for riding his profusely toggle-switxhed
brainchildren's outputs like a porn star. Granted, the artist sometimes
still known as Ryan Olcott has had practice galore, having built and
mastered the instruments with the sort of diligence usually enountered
only in fantasy novels and large-scale government operations. Only after
countless hours of woodshedding and a healthy slew of live dates did
he enlist ex-Poor Line Condition bassist James Buckley and veteran Vertiform
drummer Joey Van Phillips in what must have seemed like a very Quixotic
endeavor at the time.
Olcott got lucky. Not only does his rhythm section provide the perfect
complement to the remarkably varied profusion of colors and textures
he wrenches from his Frankeninstruments (imagine an exceedingly fluid
Warp + Mego fusion); like Olcott, Buckley and Phillips are actually capable
of responding to the digital critters' powerful surprise-generating capacity
so gracefully, you'd never guess the extent of their vigilance. Or maybe
that part is all a shuck of sorts. Lately, the whole operation has proceeded
so smoothly onstage and in the studio (where the band has proceeded well
beyond improvisation, recording elegantly structured songs, complete
with vocals) that you can't help but wonder if the keyboards, having
grown minds of their own, are merely doing their best to keep the fellas
alert. God knows, they are.

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