Matt Farley

Matt Farley (born June 3, 1978) is an American filmmaker, musician, and songwriter who has released more than 24,000 songs. His music is released under a variety of band names.

Farley's music and film output is released under the label Motern Media, and he usually presents his musical work under a pseudonym. Farley often includes his personal phone number in his lyrics, which yields calls and texts from fans surprised to find the number is real.

Life and musical career
Farley grew up in Massachusetts, graduated from Bishop Fenwick High School in 1996, majored in English at Providence College in Rhode Island, graduating in 2000, and then moved to Manchester, New Hampshire, specifically because he knew no-one who lived there. Around 2008, he discovered that songs with silly titles from his band Moes Haven (which he had streaming on Spotify) were the only ones generating revenue. He soon began writing and recording songs about everything and anything that he thought people might search for. His band names, which exceed 70, often correlate to the subject matter of their songs. For example, "Papa Razzi and the Photogs" release albums filled with songs about celebrities, and "The Hungry Food Band" releases songs about food. Thousands of songs celebrate birthdays with different names. Over 500 songs are "prom proposals" songs each sung with a different name. Yet another series of albums are composed completely of songs about towns within a U.S. state or other country, with lyrics derived from reading Wikipedia articles on each town. However, his most lucrative band is likely the "Toilet Bowl Cleaners", who sing songs about fecal matter. According to Farley, one song that contains only the word "poop" repeated over and over generates $500 in streaming revenue every month likely in part because children request it from Alexa or other devices. Farley earned over $23,000 in 2013 from his song catalog, $65,000 per year by 2018, and almost $200,000 per year by 2023.

Farley has also written custom songs, generating $2,000 or more in revenue per month, but stopped doing this in 2021. The Reply All podcast has featured Farley multiple times and used his custom songs.

Much of Farley's output is piano-and-vocals compositions. Albums can run to 100 songs in length. Some of his albums, even from a band such as The Toilet Bowl Cleaners, contain more serious output; that band's 11th album is titled Mature Love Songs, none of which are about fecal matter. Farley's serious and non-lucrative albums are called "no jokes" albums. He previously had a day-job at a group home for teens but by 2017 his musical career was so lucrative that he was able to focus on it full-time. He has two children with his wife Elizabeth.

In 2016, Farley performed "Used to Be a Pizza Hut", a song topic derived from internet traffic about how re-purposed locations of the American chain restaurant still retain their distinctive roof style, on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.

He performs an annual five-and-a-half-hour concert "extravaganza" in Danvers, Massachusetts, where he now lives.

Filmmaking
Alongside his musical output, Farley has also made more than a dozen independently financed low-budget films, almost all as collaborations with director Charles Roxburgh, which star their family and friends, with titles such as Freaky Farley (2007), Don't Let the Riverbeast Get You (2012), and Slingshot Cops (2016).

Their early films were mostly comedy-horrors, but their more recent films have broadened in their genre. As an example, in Magic Spot (2022), fan-favorite recurring actor Kevin McGee stars as the deceased Uncle Dan Port, who as a ghost visits his young nephews and nieces to teach them a poem; when his nephews Walter (Farley) and Poopy (Chris Peterson) reflect on the poem as adults, they find that it reveals the secret to both time travel, and to their uncle's mysterious death. From 2021 through 2025, Farley and Roxburgh are attempting to release two films per year.

His working method, primarily relating to his music, is the subject of a 2018 Australian documentary, Lessons from a Middle Class Artist. As well, he wrote and directed a fictionalized version of his career in 2013's Local Legends, the only film Farley has made where Roxburgh is not credited as director and co-writer.

Farley's film work has been chronicled in the book of interviews Motern on Motern: Conversations with Matt Farley and Charles Roxburgh by Will Sloan and Justin Decloux. In 2020, Spectacle Theatre and Laserblast Film Society presented an online retrospective of Motern's film work.

"No Jokes" work
Farley calls his serious music "No Jokes" music. It started with Moes Haven from 2004 to 2010, and was then revived in 2014 with Projection from the Side's Basement Reunion. This is a list of all of his "No Jokes" material.

Moes Haven era (2004–2010)

 * Moes Haven – Out with the Old (2004)
 * Moes Haven – Music for the Final Millennium (2004; taken down)
 * Moes Haven – Dislocated Songs (2004)
 * Moes Haven – Svetlana Finds Solace in the Arms of English Men of Letters (2005)
 * Moes Haven – If Not Us, Who? (2005; taken down)
 * Moes Haven – Someone Else. (2005)
 * Moes Haven – Explorations in Madness (2005)
 * Moes Haven – Moe's Haven (2005)
 * Moes Haven – Sir Paul Made Ram. We Made This. (2005)
 * Moes Haven – Down With Memories (2005)
 * Moes Haven – January (2006)
 * Moes Haven – February: From the Barnyard to the Bayou and Back (2006)
 * Moes Haven – March: of the Aliens (2006)
 * Moes Haven – April: What a Cruel Month! (2006)
 * Moes Haven – May: I Buy You a Sandwich? (2006)
 * Moes Haven – June (2006)
 * Moes Haven – July: in the Sun with Me? (2006)
 * Moes Haven – August: of Temporal Inconsistency (2006)
 * Moes Haven – September: in Manchvegas (2006)
 * Moes Haven – (SH)OC(K)TOBER (2006)
 * Moes Haven – November the Tar! (2006)
 * Moes Haven – December (2006)
 * Moes Haven – If Not Us, Who? (2007; re-release with altered tracklist)
 * Moes Haven – This is My Millennium! (2008; re-release with altered tracklist)
 * Moes Haven – Stromboli's Alarm Clock (2010)

Renaissance era (2014–2017)

 * The Toilet Bowl Cleaners – Mature Love Songs (2014)
 * Projection from the Side – Basement Reunion (2014)
 * Matt Motern Manly Man – Joyous Cackle! (2015)
 * The Very Nice Interesting Singer Man – Common Phrases (2015)
 * Matt Motern Manly Man – Motern Heartburn (2016)
 * The Very Nice Interesting Singer Man – Keep Being Awesome! (2016)
 * The Guy Who Sings Songs About Cities and Towns – I've Never Left My Hometown (2016)
 * The Strange Man Who Sings About Dead Animals – Animal Noises (2016)
 * Matt Motern Manly Man – Delicate Genius / Thirsty Killer (2017)
 * The Finklestinks – Double Take Action (2017)
 * The Very Nice Interesting Singer Man – Roy and Cathy (2017)
 * Projection from the Side – Let's Go Camping! (2017)
 * The Very Nice Interesting Singer Man – Emotions (2017)
 * Matt Motern Manly Man – Great Unfinished Masterpiece (2017)

Modern era (2018–present)

 * The Big Heist – MO75, Volume 1 (2018)
 * The Big Heist – MO75, Volume 2 (2018)
 * The Big Heist – MO75, Volume 3 (2018)
 * Matt Motern Manly Man – I Forgot What I Was Gonna Say (2019)
 * Brennan McFarley – Wednesday Night Chronicles (2019)
 * Caniko Tucci – These Are the Forces (2019)
 * The Big Heist – Tightrope (2020)
 * Brennan McFarley – The Beyond (2020)
 * Caniko Tucci – Frantic Frenzy (2020)
 * The Finklestinks – Sweetheart Deal (2021)
 * Moes Haven – Metal Detector Maniac (2021)
 * The Big Heist – Perfect Crime (2023)
 * The Big Heist – Old Route One (2023)
 * The Big Heist – This Ain't Mardi Gras (2023)
 * The Big Heist – Sirens (2023)
 * The Big Heist – Roller Rink (2023)
 * Moes Haven – (Several Supreme Beings Told Us To Make This) One Last Album (2023)