Shiny happy people

Matt & Kim let the good times roll
By MICHAEL ALAN GOLDBERG  |  March 16, 2009

090320_Matt_main
NO FAKING IT "I never want to forget that it's supposed to be fun," says Matt Johnson.


In the event of thermonuclear war, only two things will survive: cockroaches, and the smiles on the faces of Matt Johnson and Kim Schifino. The rest of the spiky, kinetic synth-pop duo — known better as Matt & Kim — may turn to ash, but those smiles are indestructible. This you'll quickly realize when you see (and you have the opportunity this Sunday at the House of Blues) Johnson grinning as he belts a nasal yelp and bangs on his keyboard and Schifino beaming as she thwacks her drums during one of their eminently euphoric, entirely too sweaty live sets. Even in their video for "Daylight" (from their recently released second album on Fader Label, Grand), where the pair are playing in a back-alley dumpster, the smiles survive.

"It was supposed to be a clean dumpster, but by clean they meant they just took all the garbage out, so there was still a thick layer of who knows what on the entire inside," the upbeat, friendly Johnson says over the phone from the couple's Brooklyn apartment as Schifino — who's eating cereal near-by — giggles audibly in the background.

"That's, like, Kim's worst nightmare. She might have smiled through the whole thing, but if you look close . . . basically she has a couple different types of smiles. One, she's excited, which is usually the smile you'll see. Another one is that she's terrified, and she'll smile a lot then. And in the dumpster she was totally uncomfortable — so she definitely had the uncomfortable smile going. But, yeah, there's usually a smile of some kind going on. We're mostly happy people."

What's not to be happy about? The pair are lovebirds; they've been together for the seven-plus years since they first met in art school. They're indie darlings, adored and respected for their homonymous 2006 debut and gigs in which they're encircled by pogoing fans singing along to every word. They've turned Matt & Kim into a full-time endeavor over the past couple of years, touring incessantly, packing venues, and becoming festival mainstays.

And in Grand they have a second album that's been favorably received and has so far avoided the dreaded blog band backlash — which was a possibility, since Grand is a departure from its predecessor. Recorded just months after the pair started playing their respective instruments, the charmingly amateurish Matt & Kim is bright, speedy, and punkish. The melodies and lyrics in this latest set are slower and more pensive, the production is thicker, and the arrangements are more considered.

"People ask me if I was nervous about the legendary 'sophomore slump,' and I was never nervous," says Johnson. "I knew we had so much more material in us and so much more diversity. It's just that we never had the time to do some of our other ideas when we did the first recording, and there was a whole side of us that people hadn't even heard yet that I thought was really important."

1  |  2  |   next >
Related: Brooklyn’s Matt and Kim just want to have fun, Branding Bangor, Musical fireworks: Lingo + the Philharmonic + the Lips, More more >
  Topics: Music Features , Nature and the Environment, Wildlife, Insects,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY MICHAEL ALAN GOLDBERG
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   BOLD AND BEAUTIFUL  |  October 27, 2009
    Alison Sudol, the LA-based artist who records and performs as A Fine Frenzy, just loves it when I bring up the first show of her first-ever tour.
  •   HE, HIMSELF, AND HI  |  October 19, 2009
    “I was always the kid who hated to do group projects at school because I always thought I could work better on my own.”
  •   FLY BY NIGHT?  |  September 08, 2009
    For a decade, Eric Johnson's primary songwriting vehicle has been Fruit Bats, but the Portland-via-Chicago singer and multi-instrumentalist has always dipped in and out of other projects — Califone, Vetiver, Ugly Casanova among them.
  •   SUITE RELIEF  |  June 10, 2009
    For Longstreth, the pressure's been ratcheted up following the online leak a couple of months ago of Dirty Projectors' fifth LP, Bitte Orca (Domino) which is finally, officially out this week.
  •   BIT PLAYERS  |  June 05, 2009
    What do you get when you cross NYU music-technology majors just out of their teens, vintage Nintendo Entertainment System and Game Boy gear, traditional rock-and-roll instruments, a mysterious, robot-building fellow named José with half a middle finger on one hand, and a shadowy underground network of info-spreading Swedes? No.

 See all articles by: MICHAEL ALAN GOLDBERG