Morsel "signed to
Choke, Inc. Records of
Chicago in the summer of 1993" . . . booking "time in February 1994 with
Steve Albini to record
Noise Floor, released in April '94.” Dave Segal wrote, “Morsel deal in hyper kinetic post-punk-prog-rock, with fractured funk moves thrown into the pot as an almost ironic gesture. The ten songs on
Noise Floor are marked by frayed
guitar textures, frequent fluid time changes, and a female voice filtered through the blow hole of a flute, for a warped alien effect that Chrome exploited so well. Sometimes Morsel seem to be playing it straight, even approaching a conventional low-key,
indie-rock beauty. But then they'll abruptly scrunch up the
rhythm, play crazy
staccato riffs, pause unexpectedly, sing like
Satan's sister . . . those kinds of things (
Alternative Press August 1994).”
Johnny Pecorelli said “Morsel's
Steve Albini-produced debut,
Noise Floor, should raise a few eyebrows itself. Sometimes
melodic, sometimes
atonal, sometimes full-on noise, the band makes use of everything from buzzsaws to
flutes,
trumpets and lilting
guitar riffs. Singer Miriam Cabrera wails through primitive rotophasers; bassist Be Hussey tunes down to low D (for added evil); while Hedge spins out effects-drenched
arpeggios from
Mars. All this and a sense of dynamics solidified by
drummer Brian Boulter which is downright
schizophrenic (
Alternative Press).” In his “Local Music: The Best of ‘94,” Agenda contributor Alan Goldsmith wrote, “Raw but
melodic,
symphonic yet
garage band. Morsel and the
music they've produced is awash in contradictions, like all great art. This release, produced by producer-GOD
Steve Albini (whose credits include
Nirvana), is spaced-out mind
music that is best heard with open ears. It's
rock and roll taken to an intense other level. Computer-processed roaming
vocals,
guitars that
sound like acid flashbacks, but with a (for lack of a better word)
symphony-like musical structure, Morsel is like a
grunge, non-smartass
Frank Zappa with their smaller sense of
music theory complexity. While all this sounds academic on paper - it isn't. It's
poetic and wonderful
rock and roll that takes risks (Agenda, 1995).” After its release, the band toured extensively across the
United States. In 1995, they recorded a follow-up EP at
Ann Arbor's
40 Oz Sound with new guitarist Geoff Streadwick engineering. On the eve of the release, the label folded. ==Small Stone Records==