As humans, we’re put on this earth with nearly limitless cosmic potential to create, to sing, to write, to share, and to help. This is why it’s the ultimate joke that most of us end up overlooking this boundless capacity in pursuit of more trivial, worldly affairs. It’s this tension that’s the core of what Mt. Feral singer/guitarist Mike Farrell calls “The Divine Mundane”-- which is also the title of his forthcoming record, due out fall 2021.The five songs can be seen as individual character studies, each contending with this idea from different angles.
An artist struggles with compromising their core beliefs to achieve a lifelong dream (“Originals”). The introspective casanova reflects on the consequences of their actions (“Sommelier”). Neighborhood gentrification becomes a metaphor for memories we can’t return to (“Stringbean”). The title track kicks things off but also ties it all together-- life is never really about us as individuals, but the things we do to the people around us.