The way Peter Pisano looks back on it, the album was made completely on a whim and a prayer.
There were no set arrangements for the songs. There was no way of knowing if the loops and other tricks they used to sound like more than a duo could be pulled off onstage. There wasn't even a studio. Instead, he and drummer Brian Moen recorded it all at Moen's house, using "whatever just happened to be around us at the time."
"The only reason there wound up being piano on the album was because Brian went out and bought one a week before we recorded," Pisano recalled of making "Inter-Be," his duo Peter Wolf Crier's debut album. "It was all unplanned like that."
The most unforeseeable chapter in the story of the life of "Inter-Be" is what happened in the seven months since Pisano and Moen put it out themselves. It earned the barely year-old duo a record deal with an internationally prominent indie label, Jagjaguwar, which re-released the record Tuesday. It also landed them write-ups on some of the hippest indie blogs (BrooklynVegan and Daytrotter) and a summer tour with an acclaimed indie band (Heartless Bastards).
Which brings us to this week. Pisano is still working as a science and photography teacher at St. Francis-St. James United School in St. Paul (that's a lot of saints). His school duties mean he and Moen can't hit the road to promote it until school ends in early June. They're warming up with a hometown CD party Friday at the Turf Club.
Pisano literally doesn't know if he will return to work in the fall, a fact that bothers him.
"Being a teacher is not the kind of job you can easily pick up and leave," he said. "It's one of those things that's completely out of my control now. It all depends on what the reception for this record is like."
If I were Pisano's boss, I would start looking for a new science teacher. "Inter-Be" stands up to the attention it instantaneously earned upon its release, buoyed by comparisons to M. Ward, Robyn Hitchcock and other classic-style folk-rock tunesmiths while also standing out as its own kind of rustic, experimental beast.