Since the days of Thoreau, we’ve often romanticized the idea of a creativity-spurring wilderness retreat. That’s especially true of Justin Vernon’s illness-evoked cabin sanctuary that ended up being the backbone of Bon Iver’s 2007 debut. But the product in mind doesn’t always have to be so strictly transcendentalist (or even acoustic for that matter) for an “escape to nature” to yield quality results.
Cut to: Logan, Iowa, the stomping grounds of avid skater and ’90s rock connoisseur Michael “Boz” Bosworth. It sure seemed like Logan was the end all, be all location for Bosworth as he settled into a day job and family life…until he split from the routine and trekked out to an isolated cabin in McLouth, Kansas for some extended songwriting sessions. Just as Boz kindled the cabin’s sole source of heat – a wood stove – so did he stoke the flames of his first proper songs with primitive recordings.
A couple summers back, Boz moved down here to Austin and instantly fell in with the thriving music scene. After revisiting those early demos and recruiting a few like-minded musician friends to help flesh ’em out, Bosworth’s finally to share the cabin’s bounty under a new mononym: Mozworth. Mozworth is an amalgamation of Boz’s core interests: the independence so closely associated with skate culture and angsty energy shared by so many pre-millennium rockers…albeit textured by the mature lyrical reflections that could only come from civilization-removed meditations.
And the first polished piece from those cabin correspondences, “Postcard”, arrived in our collective mailbox today. Packaging everything we love about ’90s indie-alt-rock into a four-minute envelope, “Postcard” proudly puts Mozworth’s stamp on these nostalgic sounds, less of a “wish you were here” and more of a “can’t wait to show you more” ahead of his upcoming debut album.
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