The Slip formed when bassist Marc Friedman and brothers Andrew Barr and Brad Barr (Drums and Guitar/Vox, respectively) moved to Boston together after graduating from high school, where they had met and first began playing music as a group.
In 1996 the trio of recent Berklee dropouts put out their first studio album and began establishing a dedicated fan-base through relentless touring in and around the northeast. A late-nineties blend of extended roots pop compositions and experimental rhythmic approaches, the band developed and found their sound through an extremely supportive local scene of artists, musicians, and actors, coupled with a rigorous, and – soon – national, tour schedule. An eclectic new brand of exploratory roots psych-rock emerged; Van Morrison meets Keith Jarrett meets Talking Heads.
By 2001, the band’s tour schedule had brought them to sold-out headlining shows at NYC’s Bowery Ballroom, successful tours in Japan, and a record deal with Rykodisc.
While the band’s line-up remained consistent throughout the next few years on the road, their sound developed considerably and the instrumentation expanded radically. The Slip grew from young, earthy avant-gardes to strong, mature contemporary-rock composers, creating a new sonic landscape that drew equally from CAN, U2, and new interests like Built to Spill and Postal Service.
By 2003, the trio’s non-stop touring produced Alivelectric and Aliveacoustic, a companion live set that also represented the inaugural release of their own independent record label, 216 records.
Aliveacoustic presented a rustic and intimate, voyeuristic snapshot of the band unplugged, on a rainy night at the intimate Club Helsinki in the Berkshire Mountains. Equal parts Wilco, My Morning Jacket, and 12 Golden Country Hits – era Ween, the album contains a tender honesty that carries through from tent-revival stomps to humble and dusty lyrical psalms.
Alivelectric, on the other hand, is almost exclusively instrumental, with a deep resonance and a wide breadth of analog and digital effects. Culled from an equally wide array of performances throughout the U.S. during the fall of 2002 and the summer and spring of 2003, Alivelectric gave 216 a chance to showcase the band at its grander, more expansive and ethereal live moments. The album presents an articulated side of The Slip much closer to Do Make Say Think, Tortoise, electric Bill Frisell and Squarepusher albums than the dusty americana present on it’s companion release.
These two records represent the most coherent articulation of the bands’ distinct sides to date, and have sold a combined 14,000 copies so far. The band has sold a total of over 50,000 albums independently.
In the five years following their last studio release, the band has also spent more and more of their time off the road in their home studios, gradually honing a new and innovative approach to recording and distilling an overall songwriting vision. So pervasive a transformation has occurred that The Slip have even recently been accused - perhaps appropriately - of ‘changing everything short of their name’.
Coming out of this, their heaviest state of growth and development in years, the band entered Q-Division Studios in March 2005 and began six months of utterly focused work with co-producer Mathew Ellard. The result is their 4th studio album, Eisenhower which stands as the most cohesive and evocative work the band has put together thus far.
Showcasing the raw analog passion of Broken Social Scene, the accessible melodic songcraft of Mojave 3, and the lush soundscapes and wash-like textures of Mogwai, the album’s dynamics also range from Iron and Wine–style intimate vocal immediacy to the thunderous big-beat anthem-sincerity of the Flaming Lips, with enough room in between for haunting vocal melodies evocative of Antonio Carlos Jobim or Sigur Ros laid over with sparce, raw, Notwist-style live percussion. It is the band’s finest work to date
Already proving itself be a very good indication of a brilliant upcoming album, the first single that has been released - “Even Rats” – that has been released (on most digital services) has already been featured in the extremely successful Playstation2 game Guitar Hero and was also chosen to be one of only ten songs preloaded on the new SanDisk mp3 player - 4.5 million of which are set to ship in mid-march 2006.
The album also contains a revamped version of “Children of December,” the demo version of which was awarded the 2004 Heineken USA/ASCAP Foundation Grant for Best Pop/Rock Song in Boston.
The spring of 2005 also saw the band spin through the northeast, accompanied by Nathan Moore on vocals and guitar, as collective avant-folk band Surprise Me Mr. Davis; a modern alt-country super-group combining the raw and intimate vocals of a Tom Waits or a Nebraska-era Bruce Springsteen with the bluesy grit of the Black Keys, The Band or Two Gallants, all layered with the lush 3-and-4-part harmonies and dirty instrumentation of TV on the Radio. Selections from a late summer Montreal recording session formed a well-received EP entitled Only in Montreal.
2005 of course also saw The Slip playing a considerable amount of shows as themselves - throughout the U.S., Japan, Canada, and Mexico - and closed out with a memorable northeast New Year’s run supported by friends Apollo Sunshine.
Starting in late 2007, the trio took an unannounced hiatus from regular touring and have since only played occasional gigs as The Slip. They have not released any albums since 2006.
The future of The Slip seems to be on hold as the founding members, Andrew Barr and Brad Barr, have been focusing their work into The Barr Brothers.
Before You Were Born
The Slip Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
All the love and riches in the world
Before you were born, you′d fly along the wind
Then you were born,
And now you want it all back again
Before you were born you had no fears
The sun was your smile and the rain was your tears
And nothing grew without the rain
And your smile would never end
Then you were born,
And now you want it all back again
I'll tell you this, I′m glad you were born
I'll drink another to you as I light my cigarette
Throw another log on desire
And play that mandolin
This chance won't come again
The lyrics of The Slip's song "Before You Were Born" convey a nostalgic longing for a time before the hardships and complications of adulthood. The opening lines depict a time when the subject had everything they needed, including love and material wealth, even before they were born. It suggests a sense of innocence and carefree existence that was lost upon entering the world.
The lyrics continue to describe a world where the subject had no fears, where the sun represented their smile and the rain represented their tears. It implies a harmonious relationship with nature and a deep understanding of the cyclical nature of life. The rain, symbolizing growth and renewal, was necessary for things to thrive, while the subject's smile was constant and eternal. However, with the arrival of birth, the subject now longs to reclaim all that was lost and wants to recapture the simplicity and abundance of their pre-birth existence.
The latter part of the song takes a slightly different turn, as the singer expresses gladness that the subject was born. They toast to the subject's birth, lighting a cigarette and adding fuel to the fire of desire. The mention of playing the mandolin adds a musical element to the scene, perhaps indicating that music serves as a means to revisit and experience the emotions associated with the subject's pre-birth state. The closing line emphasizes the uniqueness of this opportunity, implying that it won't come again in the same way.
Line by Line Meaning
Before you were born, you had it all
Before you were brought into existence, you possessed the entirety of love and wealth in the world
All the love and riches in the world
All the affection and material abundance that exists on Earth
Before you were born, you'd fly along the wind
Prior to your birth, you would soar freely with the breeze
Then you were born,
However, once you entered this world
And now you want it all back again
And now you yearn to regain everything you once had
Before you were born you had no fears
In your preexistence, you did not experience any anxieties
The sun was your smile and the rain was your tears
The radiant sun symbolized your joy, while the rain represented your sorrows
And nothing grew without the rain
Without adversity and challenges, there would be no growth or development
And your smile would never end
Your happiness would be eternal
Then you were born,
However, once you arrived into this world
And now you want it all back again
And now you desire to reclaim that eternal happiness
I'll tell you this, I'm glad you were born
Let me confess, I am overjoyed that you came into existence
I'll drink another to you as I light my cigarette
I will raise another glass in celebration of your being while igniting my cigarette
Throw another log on desire
Intensify your longing and passion
And play that mandolin
Engage in the enchanting sounds of the mandolin
This chance won't come again
You will not have another opportunity quite like this
Writer(s): Glen Richard Phillips, Randel S. Guss, Dean Dinning, Todd Nichols
Contributed by Peyton W. Suggest a correction in the comments below.