You know you've got a strange sort of magic going on when a scratchy vocal by Tom Waits
(on the reprise of the hypnotic, chamber music meets French cafe and
spaghetti western title track) is the least bizarre element. The trio of
Rob Burger (accordion, piano, pump organ, marxophone, harmonica), Carla Kihlstedt (violin, viola), and Mark Orton
(guitar, Dobro, banjo) offer a vision of what a chamber music group
might sound like if they mixed a studio session for a Western film with a
rhythmically diverse, often atonal classical excursion. The opening
track "A Life in East Poultney" finds a banjo plucking over a droning
violin as bells ring in the background. That same violin does a
seductive dance over a plucky organ base and accordion harmonies on the
title track, which evolves into the image of a train blowing harmonica
steam across the land. "Scrap" rolls like a schizophrenic fiddle tune,
and then the fiddling slows down into a mosey on the wacky and atonal
"Sand Dog Blues." And by that point, when the craziness is just
beginning, you're either tripping and enjoying or wondering who these
three are and just why they think this is commercial music. The New
Yorker put it best when it said their music is "a soundtrack for the
kind of puzzling dream which leaves you sitting awake in the middle of
the night." You will love it or loathe it, but you can't just shrug and
ignore it.
aCá
Friday, January 10, 2014
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