Sinister: Sounds of the New West
I realise that hardly anybody will read this e-mail; but if you can, please do. This music is important to me: it uplifts my soul. If just one person writes to me and says Yeh, man. Totally. Or That Willard Grant Conspiracy, going to see them next month, Ill know that Im not alone and that will re-assure me that Im not a teenage freak. If you dont want to read the ten song synopsis, just read the little blurb at the top and then skip to the end; and if you just dont like me, tell me and Ill shut up. Chasing the Normal, David. I dont know how appreciative Sinister is of Nouvelle Americana (or indeed of Classic Americana) but I am firm advocate of its consumption. Nouvelle Americana, a re-drawing of the musical topography of America, a reinvention of its great traditional musics and the creation from those traditions of something vibrant and new and unclassifiable. These artists music is the sound of the familiar made strange, compelling and alien in the classic manner of Roxy Music. While the turgid abject drizzle that passes for current UK rock and indie persists on dampenening us all, majestic music floods out of America like a raging torrent. For hairy-arsed rocknroll in the great tradition of Springsteen and The Replacements, there hasnt been a more incendiary (apoplectic) record in the last 5 years than Marahs Kids in Philly. But what I, and an increasing number of listeners, keep coming back to time and again is that part of the American music landscape that is variously described as new, insurgent or alternative country, but which is increasingly ill-served by such a strict definition much of the music being made under this journalistically-convenient label bearing only the most passing resemblance to what has traditionally passed for country. Hence the current preference for describing the type of music I love as Americana, which at least suggests something of the breadth and variety and innovation of that loose amalgamation of bands and artists whose work falls broadly into this category. This is music as a torrent of brilliance, rather than a trickle of mediocrity, a flash-flood of genius not a puddle of piss-poor prattlings from a bunch of bedwetters. I present by way of an introduction a ten song cycle which perfectly illustrates the nature of this guerrilla breed of Americana by carefully definining its ambit. 1. Neko Case & Her Boyfriends Twist The Knife The sexiest member of the Americana cast, with a penchant for leaving the house without frilly undergarments, and (apparently) not shy in telling you so. The ever astute John Peel picked up on this track from Nekos 2nd album (and no matter what Nick tells you, this is her best album) months before it was ever scheduled for release here, proclaiming it the best track hed ever heard then playing it back-to-back in quick succession. Co-written with Ryan Adams and Mike Daly from Whiskeytown, it is an achingly gorgeous ballad with ringing guitars from her boyfriend and Travis Good from The Sadies. And there are another 11 tracks this good on her album. Born on the same day and in the same town (Tacoma) as Patsy Cline, yknow (but not in the same year, obviously.) 2. Whiskeytown Factory Girl At a recent gig in London a dishevelled young Ryan Adams pleaded with the audience to stop requesting this track, choosing instead to sate their hunger with his reading of Oasis perennial classic Wonderwall. Oh dear. With echoes of Uncle Tupelo, this track elides the uncomfortableness created on the 2nd album by the fact that the band come uncomfortably close to sounding like The Eagles. Oh dear, again. Like most of Adams songs it aches with heartbreak; the girl lost Adams can only watch from a distance as the girl expurgates all the traces of Adams by working the dirt away. Sung and stalkerly prose, the song touches on two of the main themes of Americana: love (normally lost, normally to another man) and working class identity. 3. Uncle Tupelo High Water The story goes like this, see. Four friends bored, listening to punk and country decide to form a band; melding the two styles into a fiercesome fusion, Uncle Tupelo and alt.country were born. The founding fathers, Jeff Tweedy and Jay Farrar broke away from the group eventually forming new bands (Wilco and Son Volt, respectively). However, the groups formed by the break-up were imbued with only a diluted form of concentrated constituent parts that went a long way to making Uncle Tupelo so special (i.e., the punk sensibilities of Farrar guarded and guided by Tweedys country-pop leanings). No space to write about the song now Sorry. 4. Bruce Springsteen Atlantic City The Nebraska album is Springsteens portrait of a wounded and hurting America, where the victories are small and hard won, a harsh unforgiving place far removed from the shining city on thehill described by Reagan. The protagonist in Atlantic City delivers an unsurpassed scathing indictment of Reaganomics by way of the lyric I got debts no honest man could pay. A casualty of Reagans America, a nation which, for this individual, is no longer the land of promise, unless what is being promised is more suffering and disappointment. 5. The Pernice Brothers Chicken Wire Mogadon power-pop. 6. Knife In The Water Rene Austin-based they were formed in 1997, taking their name from a Roman Polanski film. Their sparse intense music is a mutant hybrid of Gram Parsons and Spiritualized, and is inspired by classic country and blues, and a tradition of murder ballads. Country is dangerous music, said Blount in Marchs Uncut. Blues and country are dangerous because they sit on this existential point. For that music to work, for that kind of music to be convincing and sincere, it really has to feel death; you have to feel the death that person is singing about. Its all about dying and sex. 7. The Jayhawks Blue This song - isnt as simple as might seem at first glance. - was written by Mark Olson and Gary Louris, who use words like kids use fingerpaint they make swirls and flourishes and scars, then they turn the scene in on itself and make it roll over with some weird filligree along the edges. - wants to crawl inside your consciousness and live with you till next autumn. 8. Slobberbone Gimme Back My Dog Texan quartet Slobberbone have never made it easy for themselves. The name itself is hardly endearing, and straddling rock, punk and roots music is never easy. But on their third album, their gmae plan reaps rewards. Priding themselves on songs whose narrative lyrics are more akin to short stories than standard rock verse, the can also drop in supremely catchy numbers like this one, which uses humour to draw you into a song that is deceptively, an emotionally-charged post-mortem of a failed relationship. 9. The Handsome Family A Beautiful Thing Modern country classics inspired by the Hindu creator/destroyer god Shiva, and Oscar Wildes contention that Each man kills the thing he loves are rare indeed. But the Handsomes are a rare breed. Rennies lyrics may take labyrinthine mythology and literary sources as their starting point, but A Beautiful Thing is a diamon-sharp example of how she refines them into scrupulously detailed tragi-comic alcohol-laced lament. A Beautiful Thing? For once, the title doesnt lie. 10. Slaid Cleaves Horshoe Lounge There was only one place for Mr Cleaves when he outgrew Portland Austin, Texas, roots rock mecca and unofficial capital of alt.country. When hes not out touring youll normally find him propping up the lonely end of the bar in the Horseshoe lounge, or a bar very like it, peeling the label off his beer, and putting down quarters in the queue for the pool table. One of the leaders of Americanas new guard of singer-songwriters. Thank you, David. PS I couldnt resist putting Springsteen in there, even though he is hardly Nouvelle. The man is sorely ignored by many people, blindly prejudiced to the fact that he wasnt always AOR. PPS Sorry to go on at inordinate length. Ive ripped some quotes from places, I cant be bothered attributing them all (so if it sounds good, I probably didnt write it). _________________________________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com. +-------------------------------------------------------------------------+ +---+ Brought to you by the Sinister mailing list +---+ To send to the list mail sinister@missprint.org. To unsubscribe send "unsubscribe sinister" or "unsubscribe sinister-digest" to majordomo@missprint.org. WWW: http://www.missprint.org/sinister +-+ "sinsietr is a bit freaky" - stuart david, looper +-+ +-+ "legion of bedroom saddo devotees" "peculiarly deranged fanbase" +-+ +-+ "pasty-faced vegan geeks... and we LOST!" - NME April 2000 +-+ +-+ "frighteningly named Sinister List organisation" - NME May 2000 +-+ +-+ Nee, nee mun pish, chan pai dee kwa +-+ +-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
participants (1)
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David Howie