Mission Of Burma - New Recordings Due In May
   Matador Records is totally psyched to announce the signing of Mission 
 Of 
 Burma.  The new album - their first new studio recordings in 22 years - 
 is 
 tentatively scheduled for worldwide release in May 2004.  
 Mission Of Burma were a Boston-based band circa 1978-1983. During their 
 brief 
 tenure, they released one album, one EP and two singles for the Ace Of 
 Hearts 
 label, all of which have been reissued on CD by Rykodisc.  Demo 
 recordings 
 and radio sessions were later released in less impressive form by the 
 Taang 
 label.  
 Since the band's breakup in 1983, their musical influence has taken on 
 mythic 
 form.  The number of bands who have cited Mission Of Burma's influence 
 is in 
 obverse proportion to the group's popularity in 1983 - though it would 
 not be 
 an exaggeration to say they've been cited more during their hibernation 
 than 
 during their existence.  
 Michael Azerrad's 2000 tome, "Our Band Could Be Your Life", has an 
 entire 
 chapter devoted to Burma's career and puts them in the pantheon of 
 other classic 
 American underground artists such as Black Flag, the Minutemen, Husker 
 Du and 
 Sonic Youth.  Though the band's core trio have been involved in a 
 myriad of 
 other projects since 1983, the legacy of Burma continues to cast a 
 shadow over 
 so much that's happened since.  
 In 2001, the founding members of Mission Of Burma, Roger Miller, Clint 
 Conley 
 and Peter Prescott,  augmented by Shellac's Bob Weston on tape loops 
 and 
 mixing, began performing together again for the first time since 1983.   
 Their 
 subsequent shows in Boston, New York, London, San Francisco, 
 Philadephia, 
 Minneapolis, Atlanta, San Francisco, Seattle, Chicago, Detroit, Los 
 Angeles and 
 Washington DC have been mostly sold-out and extremely well received.  
 (Original 
 tape manipulator Martin Swope - also a post-Burma collaborator with 
 Roger Miller 
 in Birdsongs of the Mesozoic - has retired from the music business and 
 is 
 living in Hawaii.)  
 The new album, as yet untitled, is being recorded at Boston's 
 Q-Division 
 studios, engineered by Bob Weston with assistance from Rick Harte.  
 Miller, 
 Conley, and Prescott all share songwriting and production duties, and 
 many of the 
 new songs have been unveiled at recent shows.  
 Mission of Burma will be performing January 17 in New York City at 
 Irving 
 Plaza, IN March AT THE SXSW CONVENTION IN AUSTIN, and in April at the 
 All 
 Tomorrow's Parties festival in Camber Sands.  Many more North American 
 and European 
 dates will follow upon release and throughout 2004.   
http://www.missionofburma.com