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Posts Tagged ‘murder ballads’

Songs to murder your lover by

July 24th, 2009

Timber Timbre’s music is the kind of stuff that if you put it on the soundtrack for your “crazed lunatic escapes from the asylum and begins spree-killing teenagers in the woods” thriller, it makes the movie.

timbertimbre

Taylor Kirk has come a long way from the bare bones recording style he employed on Medicinals and Cedar Shakes, released in 2007 and 2008 respectively.

Timber Timbre’s latest eponymous offering is positively orchestral in comparison to those efforts. But it’s glaringly spare next to anything else.

Released on Toronto indie-label Out of This Spark, Timber Timbre is not so much about the genre of music (though I guess if you were desperate to put labels on it like the corporato fascist you are, you could call it bluesy folk) as much as it is about mood. And the mood here could best be described as “Holy shit! Please do not murder me and leave my corpse to be eaten by wild dogs! I’ll do whatever you want!” Members of Bruce Peninsula and Forest City Lovers contribute to the album as well.

Kirk’s voice has the same brittle, warbling quality as Antony Hegarty of Antony and the Johnsons. But while Antony uses his voice to sing plaintive love songs, Kirk puts his to use on macabre murder ballads.

You might recall that I am a fan of such tunes. They put a spring in my morose step and a sliver of gladness in my black, black heart.

But these are not your grandpa Nick Cave’s murder ballads. Oh no. They are far more frightening. See, a lot of murder ballads are really up front about describing their anti-heroes plugging you full of lead or leading you down to the river where they drown you so nobody finds out about your clandestine affair. But Timber Timbre’s music is much more subtle; The threat is implied, not spoken and that’s scary as fuck. Check out the opening lines of “We’ll Find Out:”

Do your actions mention,
your heart’s intentions?
we’ll find out, we’ll find out
Is your mind mistaken,
is your conscience not at ease?
We’ll find out, we’ll find out

How will they find out? I don’t know, but if I had to hazard a guess, I bet it involves shackles, a ballpeen hammer and a rusty pitchfork hidden away in a dank root cellar illuminated by a single, bare bulb. *shudder*

Then there’s the twisted, carnival-esque song “Trouble Comes Knocking.” The steady piano and the slinky, serpentine organ interludes remind me of Screamin’ Jay Hawkins’ version of “I Put A Spell On You.” Sultry and seductive, this song sounds like the band recorded it in the swamp with a voodoo priestess at the ready to conjure demons as needed.

I like the sinister, ominous nature of the tunes on offer here. They’re darkly fragile and sickly sweet and maybe I should just go ahead and marry Taylor Kirk and have his pale, miserable little nightmare babies. Um. I’m going to stop now before I further embarrass myself. Timber Timbre plays the Island Stage at Hillside Festival Saturday at 5 p.m.

Buy their stuff on zunior or iTunes.

 
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Here’s to the here and now

March 26th, 2009

I missed Jason Collett’s set at Hillside Festival last year (though I saw him play at the Sunday Morning Gospel Hour and a Half) and somehow managed to bypass his 2008 album, Here’s to Being Here.

But I’ve been listening to it in advance of his show tonight at the eBar. Frankly, it’s been providing me with the perfect “Now-I’m-Unemployed-but-Life-Goes-On” soundtrack. Combined with Joel Plaskett’s new triple album Three, which I’m still absorbing, Here’s to Being Here has been filling my days with beautifully crafted, rootsy numbers that tell me I’ve got nothing to lose and everything to gain.

jasoncollettRoll On Oblivion does just what it says it will: You’re immersed in an ocean of folk-pop on a particularly tranquil day, with waves of chords just rippling over you, out to the horizon. And once you’re done splashing around in the ocean, there’s a sprawling afternoon before you, a perfectly good hammock stretched between two palm trees and absolutely no intention to honour any engagements. I imagine just crawling in there and listening to the Lou Reed-esque nasal tone in Collett’s voice on Not Over You and crying to myself because dammit, I still wish I had a job and I’ll never really get over losing this one, no matter how hard I convince myself I am.

I see my future in this album, too. I could picture listening to Out of Time, with its “ooh-ooh-ooh-ooh-oooohhh!” studded chorus and Rolling Stones strut on a cool, spring morning, curlers in my hair, getting ready for work and sipping coffee on a city balcony somehwere, while the streets wake up around me. There’s nothing hurried or urgent in Collett’s music and the album’s title, Here’s to Being Here, is really resonating with me. It’s something I’m learning to appreciate. Being here - right here, where I am right now - is just fine. This week is about pausing and reflecting on that.

Collett will be supported by his labelmates, Toronto group Zeus. They’re releasing their debut album, Something Awesome on Arts & Crafts sometime this spring. Right now, they’re offering a few tracks for free. They’re all catchy, sweet-sounding rockers that do pop a solid by representing.

But my favourite is The Renegade. Its piano track has a boogie-woogie feel that reminds me of nothing so much as the Beatles on Lady Madonna. Sure, sure, everything’s influenced by the Beatles. But finding yourself compared to them on your first outing is no mean feat. Keep it up, guys, and you’re going to find yourself big, stupid music stars.

But that’s not all! Local boys Tacoma Hellfarm Tragedy will be on the bill, too.

Fine purveyors of tonics to cure what ails you or murder you silently in your sleep, this foursome’s last album, Orchard Songs on Guelph’s Digital-D.I.Y. label, Out of Sound, is a triumph of gutter-crawling, lyin’, cheatin’, heart-breakin’ murder ballads.

It features many sad songs masquerading as happy songs, like True Love Killed My True Love’s Love For Me, which sets a cheery pace that wouldn’t be out of place on an Archies album. But it’s better than that, because overlapping the shiny, happy rhythm are melancholy vocals and pedal steel the way it was meant to be played, dammit. Though they’ve been around for awhile, Tacoma Hellfarm Tragedy are a new discovery for me and I’m definitely hoping to see more. Their website says a new album is due out this year, so be on the lookout!

This show is a benefit concert for Out On The Shelf, a queer library and reference centre in downtown Guelph. It’s a fine and worthy organization you should support by attending the show. Come on out! It’s from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. tonight at the eBar. Tickets are $12 if you bring a food donation, or $14 without.

 
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Ringing with horrors

March 18th, 2009

There are always too many options at Canadian Music Week and SXSW and NXNE, but don’t worry.

You’ve just gotta explore your options, look at what you think you want, then throw yourself at it in the hopes that it’ll be good. I learned a valuable lesson at CMW this year: with Elliott Brood on the bill, you never have to hope.

They performed a CMW showcase at Lee’s Palace last Saturday and put every other act on the bill to absolute shame. So much so that headliners Cuff the Duke apologized in advance for not being as awesome as Elliott Brood. OK. Not quite. But Wayne Petti did thank the “extrememly hard to follow Elliott Brood.” For their part, Cuff the Duke played extremely well. They’re almost ready to release a new album and I’m gonna be right there to buy it. That said, it was just Elliott Brood’s night.

It was ridiculous - no, INSANE - they way they brought the house down. From the second Mark Sasso, Casey Laforet and Steve Pitkin bounced onstage to play their set of country death metal songs, we were at their command. They just killed it. Just put their heads down and bashed out a solid set of murder ballads, angry, scratchy country laments and plain ol’ rock n’ roll.

Back in the day, Pat and I were roommates in Brandon, Manitoba. He rescued me from a hellishly hot, stanky attic apartment that I shared with at least one mouse. When we moved in together, I was taking part in a mix tape exchange. For one exchange, I made a disc of murder ballads and got Pat to pose for my CD cover.

murder

Thanks, Pat! Mighty fine blood you got goin’ on there.

Elliott Brood’s Mountain Meadows is an album of murder ballads based on the Mountain Meadows Massacre of Sept. 11 1857, when the Mormon militia, disguised as Natives, attacked the Fancher-Baker emigrant wagon train in the Utah territory.

Mark Twain wrote about the massacre in Roughing It: “The whole United States rang with its horrors.” 

A large party of Mormons, painted and tricked out as Indians, overtook the train of emigrent wagons some three hundred miles south of Salt Lake City, and made an attack. But the emigrants threw up earthworks, made fortresses of their wagons, and defended themselves gallantly and successfully for five days! Your Missouri or Arkansas gentleman is not much afraid of the sort of scurvy apologies for “Indians” which the southern part of Utah affords. He would stand up and fight five hundred of them. At the end of the five days the Mormons tried military strategy. They retired to the upper end of the ‘Meadows,’ resumed civilized apparel, washed off their paint, and then, heavily armed, drove down in wagons to the beleagured emigrants, bearing a flag of truce! When the emigrants saw white men coming they threw down their guns and welcomed them with cheer after cheer….”

And then, they were slaughtered. About 120 men and women were executed there, their bodies left out in the open, their bones scattered across the plains.

I’ve always had a fascination with death. Maybe that’s where my love of murder ballads comes from. The militia left about 17 children from the group alive. They were raised in the Mormon faith, where it was assumed they would not remember what happened. Elliot Brood’s Mountain Meadows doesn’t really get into the gory details of this fight. But it wonders what happened to the survivors. There’s talk of bones and graves and schoolyards and memories. All things you need to write really good murder ballads.

Beyond that, these guys have something else going for them: Showmanship. They dress in dark suits and collared shirts. They remind me, simultaneously, of morticians and gangsters; Proper, but foreboding. It’s like going to a raucous funeral.

Casey Laforet, wearing head-to-toe black, sat crouched on a stool and launched into a song, punctuating his frantic, furious guitar-playing (and he’s doing double duty on bass pedals) with wild headbanging, shouts and yelps. Steve Pitkin storms in and keeps things chugging along with meaty thumps and stomps. Meanwhile Mark Sasso (who, it must be said, bears an uncanny resemblance to Stephen Harper with dark hair) stood, tall and intimidating, strumming the banjo, the guitar and yes, the ukulele, and letting loose with an unholy wail of a voice that sounds like Brian Johnson ate Bryan Adams and washed it down with a glass of Tom Waits.

Near the end of their set, they handed out baking sheets and wooden spoons and encouraged the crowd to bang on them at the appropriate moments. Those moments came during the song Write It All Down For You and people pounded along and it all sounded so fine. The evening coalesced right then. It was the perfect moment. Everybody was along for the ride for their entire set. I only wish it had went on longer.

Basia Bulat played the bill at Lee’s last Saturday too. She had a lot of technical difficulties, especially with a troublesome ukulele. It was a sweet, small little thing, perfectly made and nice. Just like Basia Bulat. But when she went to plug it in, it wouldn’t work and she started losing the crowd. Enter Elliott Brood’s lead singer, Mark Sasso. He gallantly let her borrow his ukulele. (I know. Two groups with multiple ukuleles. It’s way better than I’m making it sound.) She picked it up. It was bigger than hers, rough and black and scratched and nicked. It looked dirty and broken, but it sounded sweet when she played it and it worked perfectly for her. You can draw your own conclusion here, but I’ll draw one too: Elliott Brood may not be pretty or perfect-looking, but they are not fucking around. When they play, shit does not dare go wrong. YOU HEAR THAT UKULELE?

Often, the most morbid tales are the ones told in a fast-paced, energetic way. You can’t listen to Ralph Stanley croon Pretty Polly or Johnny Cash romp through Cocaine Blues without learning that. Like the man in black himself, this band lays down some potent music that stays with you. I haven’t stopped thinking about them since I saw them.

They play like the hounds of hell are on their heels. They’re taking you down dark, twisty roads and they’re taking you there at a dangerous, breakneck pace. It’s breathtaking and exciting.

It’s like waking up in the middle of the night when you’re camping and you really have to pee and you play that game with yourself where you tell yourself there’s nothing out there in the woods. You can totally get up and take a piss real quick, then be back in your warm sleeping back before you even know it. Except in Elliott Brood’s songs, there IS something out there. It’s crouched in the brush and it can’t wait to gut you. It’s licking a knife right now…

I have a hard time making best of lists and stuff, but Mountain Meadows is on my list of best albums of 2008, so you should buy it and try to see this band live if you can. They’re at SXSW this week before they head back to Canada for Juno Fest in Vancouver on March 27 (They’re nominated for best roots/traditional album and best CD design) They’ll be back in their native Ontari-ari-o May 1 for a gig at The Gig Music Hall in Kitchener.

Elliott Brood albums can be purchased at Six Shooter or their personal website. You can also listen in at their myspace.

 
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EDITOR’S NOTE: I love these dudes. So much so I added another song, the amazing first track “Fingers and Tongues.”

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We’ll All Be Forgiven

March 31st, 2008

An extremely long time ago, someone posed the question, “What’s in a name?” The implication is that what you see or hear isn’t always what you get. There could be no more apt way to begin a piece about Indiana group Murder By Death.

My spouse (she hates the term “common-law”) and I were arguing a couple of nights ago about what exactly to call Murder By Death. When most people hear the name they assume it’s some kind of hardcore or metal band, maybe something akin to Killswitch Engage or Ice Nine Kills. If you’ve heard their work, however, you know that nothing could be further from the truth.

The group takes their name from a very, very old Peter Sellers movie. While that was a comedic take on the noir/murder mystery genre, the noir feel of old cinema plays a very key role in this band’s earlier recordings. While their first LP under the name was a bit scattershot, the group really took a huge step forward on 2003’s Who Will Survive and What Will be Left of Them?, an epic tale of an old Western town where you only drink whiskey from a jar and gunfights are de rigeur. The story of the album sees the devil blow into town and destroy just about everything and everyone…and what comes next.

Since then they haven’t looked back. 2006’s In Bocca Al Lupo (Italian for “In The Mouth Of The Wolf”) is their masterwork so far, inspired by Dante’s the Divine Comedy. Taking a page out of the Johnny Cash vocal delivery manual, signer/guitarist Adam Turla is all but taken over by the Man In Black’s spirit, as his once-meager-sounding vocals swell to superhuman size. His baritone is 100% Cash-ian on tracks like “Shiola” and “the Big Sleep,” old-timey laments on having done wrong, being caught, and paying the consequences (the lyrics of the latter detail a “shoe box full of money, of which I never earned a dime” buried beneath a pine tree that the protagonist advises his family use to start over after he’s put to death). That album also contained two songs that heavily foreshadow their newest release as well: “Sometimes The Line Walks You” and “Brother” combine modern rock and roll drums, outlaw country, and, in the former, a prison-break tale as old as Steve McQueen himself, making for a rollicking and frenzied package.

That template serves the band well on the recently-released Red of Tooth and Claw, where the order of the day seems to be murder ballads (though some are a little too up-tempo to be called ballads). From the lead track (“I’m comin’ home/and there ain’t nothing you can do”) to “A Second Opinion” (“If the right shows mercy/I’ll use the left hand”) to the pounding “’52 Ford” (“My mind was set and no one could know/the girl had to go”), the record is filled with sinister intentions. Even the unexpected sex-jam “Fuego” simmers with the heat of an underlying sense of danger mixed with wonton passion.

Passion of different kind is another of the band’s trademarks. The performances on the last two albums are so overwhelmingly powerful it’s a little hard to comprehend. So often when recording in studios a band sacrifices energy and enthusiasm in favour of clean, polished cuts, but Murder By Death’s playing literally gives me chills. Multiple times a record, even. It’s that heart-felt.

But the real ace in the hole is the dense and powerfully melodic cello parts of Sara Balliet. Throughout the band’s catalogue, her playing has added a timeless presence that can equally convey desperation, panic, despair, and remorse. The elegiac “Theme (for Ennio Morricone)” from the new record might be the best example, as the band pays tribute to one of film’s greatest composers through march-line drums and her constant lonesome sawing. It’s a mood-setting device that is drastically underutilized in popular music (though maybe that’s a good thing).

So what do you call Murder By Death? Jenny says rockabilly, but that doesn’t really square with me. I’d almost call it the aural equivalent of Southern Gothic, but I’m not entirely sure that works. Too country to be rock, too rock to be country, not billy enough for rockabilly…your adjective is as good as mine, I suppose. Either way, this group deserves to have people look past what some might consider a poorly-chosen moniker.

 
icon for podpress  Murder By Death - Steal Away [2:06m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
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Murder By Death is seriously the shit, you guys. Check them out here:
iTunes: pretty much everything
Web store: has a great package deal on all four LP’s
MerchNow:
some music, t’s, etc

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