You're nobody till everybody in this town thinks you're a bastard. -- Elvis Costello, "This Town" Looking up from under his stringy, black-dyed hair, Mark Mallman quoted Costello to illustrate how he feels about his ubiquitous reputation within the Twin Cities -- somewhere between adored, hated, adulated and tolerated.
"Because what I do has comic elements -- and because I'm around all the time -- there is this attitude in the Cities like, 'Oh, it's just Mallman being crazy again,'" he said.
"It doesn't matter, though. I still get excited every time I perform in town."
Say what you want about Mallman. He's too showy. He's a goofball. He's a publicity whore. He's a novelty act. He's not to be taken seriously -- especially since he sometimes calls himself Mr. Serious.
One thing you can't say, though, is that he has ever faded from the scene. Since his first album in 1998, the town's most volatile showman and well-known piano man has hovered over and crawled through the Twin Cities music community like a patron saint or a cockroach, depending on your opinion of him. He is omnipresent, even while playing 50 to 100 shows on the road most years.
After all this time, though -- after countless shows, seven albums and that one weekend in 2004 when he seemingly bared his very last nerve at the 52.4-hour "Marathon 2" concert -- there's still a lot this town doesn't know about Mallman, who's touting his eighth disc, "Invincible Criminal," Saturday at First Avenue.
Things like: The 36-year-old native of Waukesha, Wis., now lives in the basement of a former church near downtown Minneapolis, which is purportedly haunted. He's filled it with vintage stand-up video games, flexible light strips and a bar, looking suspiciously like a nightclub. In his bedroom, he sleeps just a couple feet from his keyboards, computers and recording equipment. Not that he sleeps very often.
"People think I go out every night, but I'm really a person who works about 90 hours a week," he said, mentioning a movie treatment he worked on until 4 a.m. the night before.