GOB IRON - Death Songs for the Living CD | |
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| GOB
IRON -
Death Songs for the Living CD |
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TRACK
LISTING:
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| 01.
DEATH'S BLACK TRAIN |
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| 02.
HARD TIMES |
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| 03.
HILLS OF MEXICO |
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| 04.
SILICOSIS BLUES |
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| 05.
WAYSIDE TAVERN |
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| 06.
NICOTINE BLUES |
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| 07.
DEATH IS ONLY A DREAM |
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| 08.
EAST VIRGINIA BLUES |
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| 09.
LITTLE GIRL AND DREADFUL SNAKE |
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| 10.
BUZZ & GRIND |
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JAY FARRAR: Vocals, acoustic
and electric guitars, bass, lap steel, piano, pump organ, dulcimer,
harmonica
ANDERS PARKER: Vocals, acoustic and electric guitars, e-bow,
piano, bass, drums
Performed, recorded and mixed by JF
and AP at The Hill, St Louis, MO.
“Buzz & Grind” engineered
by Mike Martin, JF and AP. Mixed by John Agnello at Head Gear,
Brooklyn, NY
Instrumentals mixed by Mike Martin and Mark Spencer
Mastered by Steve Fallone at Sterling
Sound, NY, NY
(Transmit
Sound/Legacy - 2006)
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DEATH’S BLACK TRAIN (Rev. JM Gates/Additional lyrics – Jay
Farrar) Arranged by Jay Farrar © 2006 Grain Elevator Songs (BMI)
HARD TIMES (Stephen Foster/Additional lyrics – Jay Farrar) Arranged
by Jay Farrar © 2006 Grain Elevator Songs (BMI) HILLS OF MEXICO
(traditional) Arranged by Anders Parker © 2006 No Disciple Music
(BMI) SILICOSIS BLUES (Josh White/Additional lyrics – Jay Farrar)
Melody from “Paul and Silas in Jail” by George Washington
Phillips, Arranged by Jay Farrar © 2006 Grain Elevator Songs (BMI)
WAYSIDE TAVERN* (Carter Stanley) © 1963 Fort Knox Music (BMI), Additional
lyrics and arrangement by Anders Parker © 2006 No Disciple Music
(BMI) NICOTINE BLUES (Jay Farrar) Melody from “Coo Coo Bird” © 2006
Grain Elevator Songs (BMI) DEATH IS ONLY A DREAM (A.J. Buchanan) Arranged
by Anders © 2006 No Disciple Music (BMI) EAST VIRGINIA BLUES (A.P.
Carter) Arranged by Jay Farrar © 2006 Grain Elevator Songs (BMI)
LITTLE GIRL AND DREADFUL SNAKE (Albert Rae Price) Arranged by Anders
Parker © 2006 No Disciple Music (BMI) BUZZ & GRIND (Jay Farrar) © 2006
Grain Elevator Songs (BMI) / Admin by Bug Music
All instrumentals by JF and AP © 2006 Atronado Songs
(BMI) All songs and instrumentals (except *) administered by Bug Music
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Some classic recordings are premeditated,
but in certain rare instances, when an artist has something else entirely
in mind, art barges through the studio door and takes over, bending the
artist to its will. That’s what happened to Son Volt/Uncle Tupelo
auteur Jay Farrar and his friend, Varnaline founder Anders Parker, who
met up at Farrar’s St. Louis studio in the autumn of 2004 with
the intention of recording a Son Volt album, with multi-instrumentalist
Anders Parker sitting in. Although that project got postponed, another
one willed its way into existence in the space of five days, and was
thoughtfully captured on two-inch tape by the principals. “It turned
into something neither of us anticipated,” Parker readily acknowledges.
This spontaneously created but strikingly coherent album, which bears the upbeat
title Death Songs for the Living (released Oct. 31
on Transmit Sound/Legacy Recordings), stands as a real-time landmark from these
two musical and spiritual kinsmen, who have retroactively adopted the moniker
Gob Iron (that’s British slang for a harmonica), for reasons of their own.
The nine reconfigured folk songs and one original Farrar and Parker chose, arranged
and performed on the fly during those fruitful impromptu sessions serve as a
mesmerizing demonstration of the sustained creative reverie that can take place
when two utterly attuned artists come together and simply allow themselves to
be pulled along by their taste and instincts. Death Songs for the Living consists
of a series of very different takes on these American folk standards, intercut
with instrumental miniatures – Farrar refers to them as “extemporaneous
jams” – which serve as subtle yet taut connecting threads.
“I’ve always considered folk music a fundamental form that I was
due to revisit after the one Uncle Tupelo record, March 16-20,” says Farrar. “As
for the title of the record, Anders and I just decided to pick some songs, and
only later did we realize that most of them were about death. Maybe death-related
songs resonate most, because absolutely everyone has to deal with it.”
Employing what Pete Seeger once dubbed “the folk process,” Farrar
and Parker have reimagined songs by the likes of Stephen Foster, the Stanley
Brothers, the Rev. JM Gates and others, interpolating elements of other traditional
pieces as well as writing new, sometimes highly personal lyrics, so that the
results sound both ancient and immediate, bringing a new layer of authenticity
to the material. It was as if the very atmosphere of America was filling the
lungs of the two artists as they sang.
Says Parker: “The folk music I’m most interested in is the kind that
has super-rough edges and is, for lack of a better term, fucked up – in
the presentation, the lyrical content or whatever. I really like Pete Seeger,
but I came to him later, because I was drawn to the darker, wilder-sounding stuff.
And somehow, Jay and I ended up in that same wheelhouse on this record.”
THE SONGS: “Death’s Black Train”:
This song by the Rev. JM Gates can be found on the Legacy box set
Roots and Blues; Farrar was attracted to its ethereal quality and
the style in which it was originally presented. Although it belongs
to a very different time and place, “the bedrock themes of
sin and salvation” (as Farrar puts it) found in Gates’ songs
make them especially resonant today.
“Hard Times”: Farrar learned this song from his folksinging father,
who was a Stephen Foster fan. “I just liked the sentiment in the title,” says
Farrar. “I heard it as a kid and I’ve heard people cover it over
the years, but I don’t have it on record or CD. So I was just pulling elements
I remembered and then making up new lyrics and a melody for it.”
“Hills of Mexico”: Parker heard an aborted version of this song (also
known as “Buffalo Skinners”) on the Dylan & the Band five-CD
bootleg, Genuine Basement Tapes. His take of their take. Cowboy's get cheated
out of fair wage, boss left dead in desert.
“Silicosis Blues”: In a brand-new example of the above-mentioned
folk process, Farrar brought together the melody of “Paul and Silas in
Jail” (another find from the Roots and Blues box set) and the lyric of
the miners’ lament “Silicosis Blues,” which he came across
on a blues compilation, topping off this roots mash-up with a newly penned additional
verse.
“Wayside Tavern”: This song, “Death Is Only a Dream” and “The
Little Girl and the Dreadful Snake” were all cut by the Stanley Brothers
during their first recording sessions, documented on The Complete Rich-R-Tone
78s (1947-1952). “There’s something so dark and yearning about all
of these tunes that drew me in,” says Parker, who chose them. “In ‘Wayside
Tavern,’ I changed the lyric so that the character who was singing was
murdered by the scorned boyfriend. The death of the girlfriend/barmaid is left
in question. It’s an age-old story that continues to this day—read
the newspaper for proof.” In this adaptation, Parker says he was going
for “a mid-period Richard & Linda Thompson feel.”
“Nicotine Blues”: Here, Farrar wrote highly personal new lyrics to
the tune of Clarence Ashley’s “Coo Coo Bird.” “I was
not much of a smoker, but I’ve seen the effects of it,” he points
out. “My father and several of my uncles were heavy smokers, and they all
died of lung cancer. So it’s something I was confronted by through personal
experience, and I felt like acknowledging it.”
“Death Is Only a Dream”: Parker slowed down this Stanley Brothers
song and reworked it around his piano, emphasizing the dreamy feeling of the
choruses.
“East Virginia Blues”: Farrar learned this traditional song off a
Ramblin’ Jack Elliot record. “It was one song of his that always
appealed to me, so we gave it a shot,” he says, with characteristic succinctness.
“Little Girl and Dreadful Snake”: Of his third Stanley Brothers selection,
Parker quips, “It’s apocryphal, perhaps, but be careful in the woods.”
“Buzz and Grind”: The album goes out on a visceral note with this
rocking Farrar original, which finds Parker banging away on the drum kit. It’s
another spontaneous move by the principals, whose instincts once again prove
to be impeccable. “I was listening to a lot of R. L. Burnside and thinking
of doing a whole blues record,” notes Farrar. “This song is as far
as I got. So I had it sitting around, and it seemed to fit the aesthetic, although
it didn’t have death in it anywhere – but then, that wasn’t
a fully realized concept when we recorded the songs.”
These death songs (and possibly “Buzz and Grind” as well) will come
to life, so to speak, in November and December, when Farrar and Parker do a series
of special performances. Coincidentally, Parker's third solo release, a self-titled
LP (on Baryon Records), which he describes as “an acoustic band record,” also
comes out on Oct. 31. Meanwhile, Farrar is working on a new Son Volt album. |
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