Tuesday, May 30, 2017

ROUTES & BRANCHES  
featuring the very best of americana, alt.country and roots music
May 30, 2017
Scott Foley, king of the road

Don't die / Don't disappear ...

Why no Episode last week?  Well, turns out I drove (yes, drove) from Colorado to NYC, then down to Southern Virginia and across the upper South on the way back home.  Each day's travel consumed around 8 or 9 hours of my lifeforce, but I did thoroughly enjoy the trip.  Because of the whirlwind nature of things, I never had more than a couple minutes to sit and write or to listen to anything other than Sirius (which is far more repetitive than you'd think - how many times can I hear the new National song before it becomes the theme song to my journey?).  My wife doesn't share my appetite for musical discovery, and I spend much of my time behind the wheel challenging myself to find music she'll enjoy that doesn't feature Paul Simon.  Needless to say, no ROUTES-cast either.  We'll kick that back into gear as soon as I can iron out the kinks in my back.

I did, however, pass some time with Matthew Ryan's new record, Hustle Up Starlings.  Sounds like he actually considered leaving his shoes in the ring after the release of 2014's excellent Boxers.  Not that he was experiencing writer's block.  He was just tired of the solitary work of songcraft.  Like Joe Henry, Ryan was as a promising alt.country figure during his early days.  Also like Joe Henry, Ryan himself never fully returned the affection, opting to romance a more fickle muse over the space of more than a dozen albums.  It took a collaboration with producer and Gaslight Anthem frontman Brian Fallon to draw him back into the studio for Starlings, a collection that pairs the streetwise cinematic storytelling of Craig Finn (or Fallon himself, for that matter) with the guitar hero moments of Ryan Adams.

Those last two releases have seen Matthew Ryan gathering a crew of conspirators, players who encouraged him to embrace "all that punk and noisy folk with a gigantic heart".  That appeal is nearest the surface on songs like "Close Your Eyes" and "Battle Born", tunes that bring to mind Paul Westerberg's edgy folk.  The latter invokes heros like Chrissie Hynde and Lou Reed, artists who raged against disillusionment and complacency, screaming hope in the land of the lost.  Both songs show Ryan at his most public, making music with sharp hooks and a beat to bounce to, guitars wrestling drums for top booking.

I don't know if there's more than this / A loud guitar, some comfort or a kiss / All I know is that it's in the shape of a fist / And it's pounding inside your ribs
 Hustle Up Starlings also trades in the dusky, internal pieces for which Ryan has earned his reputation.  His voice a whisper and a rasp, cushioned in a spacious arrangement that generates a darkness and a tension at the same time it makes a beautiful noise.  "Maybe I'll Disappear" and the title track dwell in the shadows of this more cinematic light. "Hustle Up Starlings" comes from that subliminal dialog that has become a perennial part of his work.  I smile at strangers / And talk to myself / My thoughts are lonely / Lonelier than hell.  It's stuff that's most suitable as the night's tuning up, a gorgeously private poetry for those of us given to melancholy and reflection.  With its piano and short muttered phrases, "Disappear" sketches a spare but indelible picture:
The drawl of leaves / And that quiet cold / That settles in / Once you know / We're all hotels / There ain't no home.  
But while it acknowledges our separation and doubt, Starlings is not a record without its hope.  In a recent interview, Matthew Ryan cited a poem by Charles Bukowski in which the writer focuses uncharacteristically on the silver lining while never losing sight of the dark cloud.  There are ways out. / there is a light somewhere. / it may not be much light but / it beats the darkness.  This new collection is birthed by collaboration, spawned by the community Ryan sought to complete the musical vision and to counter the solitude he wished to avoid.  There's an anthemic, rallying quality to songs like "Run Rabbit Run", a nearly U2-esque element to the chiming guitars of "It's a Delicate Waltz".  It's a romantic spirit that's the product of recognizing life's inescapable brutality while refusing to banish hope and possibility.

Through the roots rock and the synthesizers, the dissolved labels and the records whose critical reception failed to generate an equivalent popular buzz, Matthew Ryan has made music that matters.  If we're lucky, this newfound inspiration will inspire him to continue in the generous vein of Boxer and Hustle Up Starlings.  Few artists speak as eloquently to the sticky stuff / between two hearts.

Back to the ROUTES-cast next week, including new stuff from Alabama Shakes, Lee Bains III, Elliott BROOD and no fewer than 27 other offerings.  In the meantime, I've left last Episode's files on the previous post.  Happy to be home.

Sunday, May 14, 2017

photo cowtown chad

ROUTES & BRANCHES
a home for the americana diaspora
May 13, 2017
Scott Foley, purveyor of dust

How to put it.  Let's see.  It's just that knowledge of words and how to use them.  How to see words as more than just a means to an end, or just another piece of the song.  It's this;
Fat man sitting on a little stool / Takes the money from my hand while his eyes take a walk all over you / Hands me the ticket, smiles and whispers good luck /  Cuddle up angel, cuddle up my little dove / We'll ride down, baby, into this tunnel of love ...
No, you're right.  John Moreland didn't write that.  But Moreland knows some good words, and he knows how to stack them so that they make a great racket when they fall.

He conjures that magic on his new record, Big Bad Luv, though something has changed since 2015's High on Tulsa Heat.  John Moreland is in love.  Or luv.  And like good love does, it's made him see himself differently.  I'm still staring at the sky like at the start / With all these heavy anchors on my heart / But they don't suit me like before.  "It Don't Suit Me" is direct, melodic, criminally catchy, maybe the year's best single.  Heck, there's even a jangly tambourine.  Like much of Moreland's new stuff, it's buoyed by the fullest, most deliberate arrangement of his career.

If we didn't know better, we'd be concerned.  Especially since 2013's breakout In the Throes, Moreland has come across as a sympathetic figure, a downcast fellow who can communicate our brokenness more eloquently than any artist of his generation.  We wanted the best for him, even as those heartbreaking lyrics indulged our melancholy.  So what are we to make of this:  I've found a love that shines into my core / And I don't need to prove myself no more ... ?

There's a lot of this taking personal stock on Big Bad Luv, glances over the shoulder at what's come before.  There are no apologies, and Moreland's hardly admitting any fault.  But things have changed.  The record applies traditionally religious language and imagery to address this personal crucible and challenge, walking out of the darkness or at least having someone with whom to face it.  In churches learning how to hate yourself / Ain't grace a wretched old thing ... With frequent piano, steel and even the occasional handclaps, there's almost a gospel spirit to the songs.

We felt for Moreland, that sad bastard.  In a recent interview, he acknowledged that some of this music was written to counter that reputation, to shake it loose or at least to provide an alternative.  It's a thread that shines throughout Luv:
Come on young savior, don't let your fever go to waste
I never meant to be / Your woe-is-me emergency
Don't let me be that devil that I sang
But what if I'm just a bastard / Laying low inside your radio 
If we don't bleed / It don't feel like a song 

After writing reviews of those two previous albums, I've learned I'm unable to talk about my appreciation of Moreland without quoting him ...  And once again, no appreciation of this new work would be complete without celebrating that lyrical genius.  But whereas much of his earlier work conveyed such an interior, self-critical message, you might find a more open, otherly-directed spirit to some of these tunes.  It's still not an entirely upbeat, feelgood collection, and Moreland's still too young to call an end to his search.

Complimenting these more full arrangements, there's also a newfound simplicity and directness to songs like "Amen So Be It".  There's the use of repetition here and there, and a recognition that a song with fewer words can prove just as meaningful and abiding.  Once again, Moreland has chosen to self-produce, though Tchad Blake contributed to the mixing process.  Folks like Shovels & Rope and Dawes contribute backing vocals, while Lucero's Rick Steff proves his piano lines can speak volumes.  And here's hoping that frequent sideman John Calvin Abney earns some new attention for his valuable and wide ranging work.  Not everything on Big Bad Luv is packed to the edges.  But the range of sound and emotion simply serve to make more acoustic, reflective moments like "Latchkey Kid" or "No Glory In Regret" shine brighter and strike deeper.

Could you help me wash these years off of my face.

No doubt John Moreland is looking to capitalize on the attention he earned with Tulsa Heat, and the recent success of peers like Chris Stapleton and Jason Isbell might bring a larger audience to his doorstep.  And, hey it certainly doesn't hurt that Miranda Lambert can't stop talking about the guy.  But amidst the opportunity, and despite the changes and the new choices, he remains a genuine, strikingly eloquent artist. He is drawn by a truly personal muse, and sings with a depth of feeling like few others.  So when "Sallisaw Blue" or "Lies I Chose To Believe" show up on late night tv, or when "It Don't Suit Me" bounces from your stereo speaker, there's no need to worry.  John Moreland's in love.  Just take your place in the reception line.  Bless our busted hearts.

Also here, Ryan Adams makes public nearly 20 tunes that didn't quite make the cut for his Prisoner album (but they're good enough for us).  Lydia Loveless reveals that she is a Belieber.  And please welcome Matthew Ryan to our fledgling list of year-end favorites!  All this, plus this week's weekly ROUTES-cast awaits below.  Are you sure you still have time for dinner ... ?

- Felice Brothers, "Love Me Tenderly" Felice Brothers  (Team Love, 08)
- Joan Shelley, "If the Storms Never Came" Joan Shelley  (No Quarter, 17)
- Bonnie 'Prince' Billy, "I'm Always on a Mountain When I Fall" Best Troubador  (Drag City, 17)  D
- House and Land, "Wandering Boy" House and Land  (Thrill Jockey, 17)  D
- Old Crow Medicine Show, "I Want You (live)" 50 Years of Blonde on Blonde (OCMS, 17)
- North Mississippi Allstars, "61 Highway" Prayer for Peace  (Songs of the South, 17)
- Buddy Miller, "Woke Up This Morning" I'll Take You There: An All-Star Celebration  (Blackbird, 17)
- John Calvin Abney, "Dallas City Lights" Better Luck  (Bullet in the Chamber, 14)
^ John Moreland, "Amen So Be It" Big Bad Luv  (4AD, 17)
- Joseph Huber, "Playground/Battlefield" Suffering Stage  (Huber, 17)
- Aaron Lee Tasjan, "Everything I Have is Broken" Crooked River Burning  (Rockwood Music, 14)
- Chris Stapleton, "Either Way" Songs From A Room: Vol. 1  (Mercury, 17)
- My Morning Jacket, "Easy Morning Rebel" It Still Moves  (ATO, 03)
- Vandoliers, "Endless Summer" the Native  (State Fair, 17)
- Jade Jackson, "Aden" Gilded  (Anti, 17)
- Ryan Adams, "Please Help Me" Prisoner: the B-Sides  (PaxAm, 17)  D
- Dan Auerbach, "King of a One Horse Town" Waiting on a  Song  (Easy Eye, 17)
- Secret Sisters, "He's Fine" You Don't Own Me Anymore  (New West, 17)
- Pokey LaFarge, "Must Be a Reason" Manic Revelations  (Rounder, 17)
- Bap Kennedy, "Nothing Can Stand In the Way of Love" Restless Heart  (Last Chance, 17)
- Jake LaBotz, "Hobo On a Passenger Train" Sunnyside  (Hi-Style, 17)
- Lydia Loveless, "Sorry" Desire/Sorry  (Bloodshot, 17)  D
- Steelism, "Eno Nothing" Ism  (Intoxicating Sounds, 17)  D
- Eilen Jewell, "Dusty Boxcar Wall" Letters From Sinners & Strangers  (Signature Sounds, 07)
- Matthew Ryan, "Close Your Eyes" Hustle Up Starlings  (Ryan, 17)  D
- Margo Price, "Downpour" Cover Stories: 10 Years of the Story  (Looking Out, 17)  D
- Ryan Bingham, "Rainy Day Woman (live)" Outlaw: Celebrating the Music of Waylon Jennings  (Bluebird, 17)
- Arliss Nancy, "Vonnegut" Wild American Runners  (Gunner, 13)
- Mastersons, "Perfect" Transient Lullaby  (Red House, 17)  D
- Deslondes, "Hurricane Shakedown" Hurry Home  (New West, 17)





Saturday, May 06, 2017

ROUTES & BRANCHES  
featuring the very best of americana, alt.country and roots music
May 6, 2017
Scott Foley, purveyor of dust


I began to look forward to Colter Wall’s debut full-length upon hearing his contribution to the soundtrack for last year’s Hell or High Water movie.  Poking around a bit further, I came across online praise from blocky wrestler Brock Lesnar and one-time celebrity Dog the Bounty Hunter, and found that Colter’s dad is Premier of the Saskatchewan province.  In a desperate attempt to rescue my first impression, I turned to his 2015 Imaginary Appalachia EP.  While the sound was quite a bit more primitive than the stuff I’d heard from the forthcoming record, the writing was there.  And so was the voice. 


The Voice.  A syrupy baritone drawl, something you might hear from a long-forgotten Delta bluesman, or perhaps from a hard living 1970s outlaw who defeated the odds to survive middle age.  But not something you’d expect to exit the lungs of a 21-year old Canadian who's still working on his first full beard.  Thanks to smokes and who knows what else, Colter Wall’s voice is a thing of rough beauty, perfectly hewn for the harrowing tales he tells on his self-titled record. 

Rasslers aside, the young man has also garnered high praise from Steve Earle, who called him “bar-none the best singer-songwriter I’ve seen in twenty years”.  Far as I know, that marks the strongest statement he’s made about another writer since a young Earle threatened to stand on Dylan’s coffee table to sing the praises of Townes Van Zandt.  Wall is an eloquent songsmith, earning his place in a celebrated line of folk and country legends like Hank and Cash and Prine and, yes, Townes (whose “Snake Mountain Blues” he tackles admirably here). 

“Transcendent Ramblin’ Railroad Blues” might just as well have come from the pen of TVZ.  Fingerpicked acoustic, unintrusive piano chording and pedal steel set the scene for a rambler’s mournful eulogy.  Such restraint can be ironically bold on the part of any artist, and show great trust in the magic of Wall’s simple delivery.   He doesn’t reinvent the vernacular or tell a story we’ve not heard before.  But like the best western movies and novels, he works refreshing wonders with familiar pieces.  It brings to mind a classic like Prine’s “Speed of the Sound of Loneliness”. 

“Thirteen Silver Dollars” is another quiet stunner, this one built on nothing more than an acoustic and the steady stomp of Wall's boot. Well I got my health / My John B Stetson / Got a bottle full of baby's bluebird wine / And I left my stash / Somewhere down in Preston / Along with thirteen silver dollars and my mind.   “Codeine Dream” strikes more of a Kristofferson vibe, a dark dead end ballad that's also starkly beautiful in its despair.  And in each of these tunes, Colter Wall's delivery strikes a chord that is true and resonant to the core.  Perhaps these aren't the kind of songs you can sing with a pretty voice ...

Wall has cited Arlo Guthrie as his inspiration for the relatively upbeat “Motorcycle”: Well I figure I'll buy me a motorcycle / Wrap her pretty little frame around a telephone pole / Ride her off the mountain like ol' Arlo / Figure I'll buy me a motorcycle.  Again, nothing fancy.  Nothing more or less than the kind of country-folk music that speaks of our days and our nightmares.  But herein lies Wall's promise.  His songs sound like they could've been delivered ages ago by Arlo himself.  

I believe I’ve stated previously on these pages that producer Dave Cobb wields a definite stamp on his projects.  To his immense credit, Cobb simply brings Colter Wall forward on these arrangements, freeing his voice from the muddy mess of his debut EP.  The resulting tracks are clean but refreshingly sparse, seemingly unconcerned with current trends and fashions.  The uncrowded environs leave Wall free to carve his way into your psyche.  Colter Wall is the indelible crease on a favorite pair of leather boots.  It is the dust on the dash of a trusted old pickup, and the sigh of a tired dog giving into gravity.  More directly, we’ve got an artist here who promises to make a difference in the world of folk and country music.  


- Iron & Wine, "Sodom South Georgia" Our Endless Numbered Days  (Sub Pop, 04)
- Harmed Brothers, "Adopt a Highway" Harmed Brothers  (Fluff & Gravy, 17)
- Sarah Shook & the Disarmers, "Sidelong" Sidelong  (Bloodshot, 17)
- Leeroy Stagger, "Crooked Old World" Love Versus  (True North, 17)
^ Colter Wall, "Transcendent Ramblin' Railroad Blues" Colter Wall  (Young Mary's, 17)
- Steve Earle, "Goodbye" Train a Comin'  (Warner, 95)
- Steve Earle, "Lookin' For a Woman" So You Wannabe An Outlaw  (Warner, 17)  D
- Lillie Mae, "Honky Tonks & Taverns" Forever and Then Some  (Third Man, 17)
- John Moreland, "Sallisaw Blue" Big Bad Luv  (4AD, 17)
- William Matheny, "Funny Papers" Strange Constellations  (Misra, 17)
- Trampled by Turtles, "Are You Behind the Shining Star" Wild Animals  (Banjodad, 14)
- Andrew Combs, "Rose Colored Blues" Canyons of My Mind  (New West, 17)
- the Weeks, "Hands on the Radio" Easy  (Lightning Rod, 17)
- Blackfoot Gypsies, "Promise to Keep" To the Top  (Plowboy, 17)
- Bonnevilles, "You're Not Alone" Listen For the Tone  (Alive Naturalsound, 17)
- Left Lane Cruiser, "Claw Machine Wizard" Claw Machine Wizard  (Alive Naturalsound, 17)
- M Ward, "Flaming Heart" End of Amnesia  (MWard, 01)
- Justin Townes Earle, "Graceland" single  (New West, 17)
- Los Straitjackets, "Cruel To Be Kind" What's So Funny About Peace Love & Los Straitjackets  (Yep Roc, 17)
- Matt Urmy, "I'm Gone" Out of the Ashes  (Red Light Library, 17)
- Mic Harrison & High Score, "Vanishing South" Vanishing South   (Mic, 17)
- Joseph Huber, "Sons of the Wandering" Suffering Stage  (Huber, 17)
- Cory Branan, "Visiting Hours" Adios  (Bloodshot, 17)
- Whiskey Gentry, "Following You" Dead Ringer  (Pitch-a-Tent, 17)
- K Phillips, "Coalburner" Dirty Wonder  (Rock Ridge, 17)
- Jason Isbell, "Cumberland Gap" Nashville Sound  (Southeastern, 17)
- Will Johnson, "Ruby Shameless" Hatteras Night a Good Luck Charm  (Undertow, 17)
- Chris Stapleton, "Second One to Know" From a Room: Vol. 1  (Mercury, 17)
- Todd Adelman, "Not Sure What Scares Me More" Time Will Tell  (Adelman, 17)  C, D
- Charlie Worsham, "Take Me Drunk I'm Home" Beginning of Things  (Warner, 17)