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From the Bedroom to Now – Talking to (a Few Members of) Mother Falcon ic Entertainment


An intimate space, used to Mother Falcon's advantage: Claire Puckett in the center, Tamir Kalifa to the far right
Mother Falcon used the Austin Music Volume 10 compilation to “jettison” them into SXSW 2011. The “none of the above” winner at the Austin Music Awards in 2011 is one of the most bemusing outfits playing in the city right now. An unusually large lineup creates hard-to-pin down music that combines the earthy musings of folk, the erudite sophistication of Romantic music and the postmodern snark of alt-rock. At this year’s Austin Music Awards they closed the ceremonies.
“That was a big honor,” says bookish vocalist and accordion player Tamir Kalifa. “This is our first time out here and it’s a critical moment for the band.”
Tamir and his interview partner, raven-haired vocalist, guitarist and pianist Claire Puckett represent roughly 10% of Mother Falcon’s stage-busting lineup. Their name originates from cable TV showings of Die Hard where a commonly said expletive phrase had to be cleaned up for family viewing (as in, “Yippee-kay-yay mother falcon!”).
“We’re thinking a lot about moving into regional and national circles,” Kalifa says. The band “repped Austin hardcore” at the 35 Conferette music conference in Denton in March. Their new album, Alhambra, was released earlier in 2011.
Mother Falcon has officially been around for three years. Originally the music was nearly “3/4ths cello,” but once Claire joined the group it “slowly morphed and grew” to its present shape. Some of the members had played with Nick Gregg in high school, and both Claire and Tamir fondly recall gigs with “crazy-packed stages and violinists spilling into the crowd, three violinists sharing a microphone.” Early performances took place in various living rooms, as well, where Mother Falcon could “use the intimacy” of the location to their advantage. “We’d get everyone’s faces flushed with warmth,” Puckett poetically states.
“We released a 5-song EP about a year ago, and that’s how we hit Austin,” Tamir recounts. “We then were just playing out for a while, and with this we developed a more cohesive and mature sound.”
The duo says the ginormous band has been trying to get away from their earlier aesthetic of “a big classical sound.” Tamir says “the new music can be jazzy or groovy rock.”
“The strong point of Mother Falcon is the live experience,” Puckett says. “We try to capture that on album by recording in a church as it happened. We captured our live sound, live.”
The band later held their CD release party at the same church. “If we can develop our dynamics, I can play my part to the best of my ability,” Kalifa describes.
“Earlier on, the quiet moments would get lost or we’d get lost in the loud sections or vice-versa,” Claire explains. But that doesn’t happen anymore, as the group has grown into a surprisingly tight unit for such an ungainly setup. There has to be a lot of different musical interests and influences coming through at any given time.
Tamir, true to the band’s universal outlook, has been listening to the exotic, buzzing alt-rock band A Hawk and a Hacksaw. “It’s led by the drummer from Neutral Milk Hotel (ed’s note: Jeremy Barnes),” he informs. “Also, Esperanza Spalding is great.”
Claire has kind words for Sufjan Stevens’ latest opus, The Age of Adz. “I also want to get the new Radiohead,” she says. “Li’l Wayne’s back, too, and I’m excited about that.”
The two say that right now there is a “war” among the band over the merits of divisive hip-hop superstar Kanye West. AME, of course, thought his last record was pretty great.
“We don’t have any huge plans right now,” Puckett states. “We’re doing a Texas tour at the end of the summer; we’re starting small.”
One of the biggest changes for the current touring incarnation of Mother Falcon is the addition of “an actual drumset,” in Claire’s words, to the lineup. “It’s drums as opposed to rhythmic texture, which was our old approach.”
Kalifa describes the band as “taking a new direction. The new direction is louder, we’re not going to rely on classical moments, but we’re also not a rock band. There is not a wall of sound.”
“Our last three songs were the hardest to write,” Kalifa continues. “We’re pushing what we’re doing, and it feels epic. Like two and a half minutes with a lot packed in.”
“Structurally, it’s simple,” Puckett says. “But it’s got as many people involved in the singing as possible.”
Alhambra is available now. Stay tuned to AME for further Mother Falcon updates.

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