FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE –
The music artist known as Failure
Theory has released his latest LP record album, titled, “The
Fragile Life of Rigidity.” The album is comprised of eight original
tracks for an approximate total listening time of half an hour. A
gritty, grinding and raw collection of the latest Failure Theory
material, “The Fragile Life of Rigidity” is a sonic exploration
of human limitations and the extremities to which frustrations can
lead.
Failure Theory cites as main artistic
influences Andy Wallace, Ani DiFranco, and Nine Inch Nails. “The
Fragile Life of Rigidity” boasts vocal stylizing with certain
attributes that recall Trent Reznor, and has spare and unforgiving
guitar licks that would make Ani DiFranco proud. Yet, Failure Theory
has a sound all his own, and comparisons stray further from the
listening experience than they actually describe it.
The tone of the record is wrapped in
its title. When asked to describe how he originally became involved
in music, Failure Theory writes, “Don’t really feel like I ever
did.”
Asked to comment on any message or
meaning the record may have in store for fans, he speaks candidly.
“I don’t know if there is a
message,” he says. “It’s really more of a reflection on
repeated failure in every facet of life and the accompanying range of
emotions.”
Failure Theory's official bio explains
this perceived “repeated failure” in detail.
“I was born with all the advantages
of a suburban white kid from a slightly below middle class family,”
the bio reads. “The only thing those advantages have ever produced
are failure.” It goes on to say that the only thing that makes FT
feel “real” is “the sound of well mixed music. The guitars are
hypnotic. Rage inducing. Peace-giving. I think great mixing engineers
are the greatest musical artists of our time (I wish I were one of
them). They paint with sound.”
As a child, Failure Theory was told by
his father that he “sucked” at guitar. He describes his social
skills as fundamentally lacking.
“I don’t deal with many other
people very well,” he writes. “I don’t seem to value the things
other people value. An acquaintance once told me that I was a
nihilist in the worst kind of way.”
Failure Theory has been recording his
own music for years. He has written and recorded two previous
records, each one better than the last, yet still sub-par by his own
estimation.
“[The second album] was better,” he
writes, “in the way dying in a car crash is probably better than
dying from cancer. You know it is, but who really gives a s--t.”
Failure Theory has tried to quit music
entirely on several occasions, but cannot seem to make the no-sound
diet stick, either. In the meantime, he became an attorney at law.
Disillusioned at the utter lack of positions in his field after
graduation, his aggravations mounted and another album loomed in his
imagination.
“And there it was,” his bio
concludes. “That sound. It started in my head again. . . The
obsessing started again. 'I’ll just record some covers,' I said.
Before I knew it, I was knee deep in another 'album.'”
The record would grow to become “The
Fragile Life of Rigidity.”
“It’s different:” Failure Theory
concludes, “because it’s a little better. It’s the same:
because it still sucks. I guess you are what you are. I am a quitter.
A quitter that cannot quit. It’s sad. It’s old. It's
melodramatic. It’s me.”
“The Fragile Life of Rigidity” by
Failure Theory is available online worldwide.
-S. McCauley
Staff Press Release Writer
MondoTunes
The LP “The
Fragile Life of Rigidity” is distributed
globally by MondoTunes (www.MondoTunes.com)
and is available at iTunes for convenient purchase and download
MondoTunes
(www.mondotunes.com)
supplies the largest music distribution in the world and provides
upstream services for many major labels in search of breakout
artists. While most independent distributors reach only 45-50
retailers despite charging needless monthly and yearly fees,
MondoTunes reaches over 750 retailers and mobile partners in over 100
world regions without any monthly or yearly fees.
ARTIST CONTACT INFO:
eMail
-
failuretheoryemail@gmail.com
website -
failuretheory.com
failuretheoryemail@gmail.com
website -
failuretheory.com
Twitter:
@failuretheory
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