Wednesday, July 18, 2007


MILTON & THE DEVILS PARTY CELEBRATE “WICKED” NEW RELEASE
AT THE WORLD CAFÉ LIVE ON SEPTEMBER 8

July 17, 2007 - Philadelphia’s “rock band for thinking people, Milton & The Devils Party will celebrate the release of How Wicked We’ve Become at World Café Live on Saturday, September 8. The sophomore disc is due out August 21 on Philly-based indie Transit of Venus with national distribution through RedEye.

As professors of literature at Widener University, it should come as no surprise that their name, Milton & The Devils Party, is a literary reference. Robinson explains, “It's based on a passage from William Blake's The Marriage of Heaven and Hell where he describes the 17 th -century English poet John Milton as “a true poet and of the devils party without knowing it.” He's talking about how Milton's Satan is full of more creative energy than Milton's God--both characters from his poem Paradise Lost .”

Perhaps that is how Robinson and Graybill best balance each other musically: playing to their devilish strengths. Robinson, a published author of lyric poetry, is the primary songwriter while guitarist Graybill finds inspiration in the styles of Peter Buck (R.E.M.) and Johnny Marr (The Smiths) for his arrangements of Robinson's songs. Drummer Bob Falgie rounds out the trio.

To the literary naïve, do not be intimidated. As Jonathan Takiff of the Philadelphia Daily News explains, “Their lyrics have an edge, but the spirit of [the] songs… is more sarcastic punk than highfalutin poetics.”

As Milton and the Devils Party, Graybill and Robinson believe in the relevance of rock, but also think that rock, if it is to survive, must become smarter and insinuate itself as part of a larger lyric tradition. “But,” Robinson adds, “the last thing we want to do is make music only English professors will like. These songs are for everybody.”

Produced by Brian McTear (Matt Pond PA, B.C. Camplight, Espers, Mazarin and The A-Sides), How Wicked We've Become features contributions from guitarist and songwriter Pat Manley (Robinson's former student), guitarist Morgan Terrioni, saxophonist Sean Gardner, poet Dan Albergotti, and B.C. Camplight's Brian Christinzio on keyboards.

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