Tag Archive: Vic Chesnutt


LANGUID LIVE LAMBCHOP

LAMBCHOP Live at Teatro Masini, Faenza – 21st June 2013

On the night Lambchop played Faenza, the town’s annual deranged chariot races (“La folle corsa delle bighe”) were taking place in streets nearby.

From footage of previous years’ derangement these look like something out of a Monty Python sketch in which home-made chariots, with occupants dressed in makeshift medieval robes, are pulled by two men to race one another around a short circuit.
I think Kurt Wagner could write a pretty decent song about such orchestrated madness but you could count on the fact that it would be no straight narrative of events. His is another kind of strangeness. Continue reading

COWBOY JUNKIES BOXED BARGAIN

To pop pickers in search of a genuine bargain, the 5 Cd box set of the Cowboy Junkies’ Nomad Series which be released on April 17th 2012  looks  too good to be true.

This series comprises the four superb albums the Junkies have released over the past 18 months.

I have reviewed  the first and last of these volumes for Whisperin’ & Hollerin’ and can also vouch for the high quality of the other two.

Whatever your currency , £17.02 / $25.00 or €17.82  seems a snip for such exceptional  music.

As explained on the merch section of the band’s website the box includes – Renmin Park (Volume 1) –  Demons – Vic Chesnutt covers (Volume 2),  Sing In My Meadow (Volume 3) and The Wilderness (Volume 4) as well as Extras – 10 songs recorded during the making of The Nomad Series but not included on any of the volumes.

You also get a 52 page colour booklet which I imagine will include the wonderful artwork by Enrique Martinez Celeya.

Buy, buy, buy.

WELCOMING MR M

The record that made Lambchop nearly famous was Nixon in 2000 – a sophisticated mix of Americana, soul and country rock.

But it was the more subdued follow-up, Is A Woman, two years later that I still rate as the Nashville band’s finest moment.

This was not treated with the same enthusiasm as its predecessor so, for example, we got a lukewarm Pitchfork review (although the critic did concede that it may actually be a ‘grower’ and that his piece might come back to haunt him).

Is A Woman was the type of quiet, reflective album that forces the listener to sit down and pay attention and these are not records that you write about with a deadline to keep.

I’ve been waiting 10 years for Kurt Wagner and his band to make an album with a similar degree of somber beauty and grace. Their releases in the interim haven’t been bad but somehow failed to reach the same heights. Until now, that is.

It is early days yet, since it only came out a couple of days ago, but it strikes me that Mr. M  has the same melancholy artistry as Is A Woman – beautiful string arrangements, lilting piano refrains and Kurt Wagner’s gruff, half-whispered vocals weaving a magical spell. Continue reading

THIS MUST BE THE PLACE

Paolo Sorrentino’s Il Divo, a masterly film portrait of the ultimate political survivor Guilio Andreotti, so impressed Sean Penn at the 2008 Cannes Film Festival that he told the Italian director he would be happy to consider appearing in any future film he made.

Taking the bull by the horns Sorrentino went away and wrote the part of a former Goth-rock star with Penn in mind. To his delight and amazement, Penn accepted immediately.

Sean Penn plays Cheyenne, a 50-year-old adolescent with the slow, awkward gait of an intense teenager carrying the weight of the world on his shoulders.

Cheyenne is described by  Sorrentino as “childish, but not capricious. Like many adults who remain anchored in their childhood he has a knack of maintaining only the limpid, touching and bearable qualities of kids”.

For the role, Penn adopts a camp, emotionally detached voice yet despite his apparent boredom , bordering on depression,  he is always fully engaged with those he speaks with. There are some great one liners that would have fallen flat if he had played the part in a more extravagant manner.

Robert Smith – the other Cheyenne.

The general look of the character, with bright red lipstick and a ‘pulled through the hedge backwards’ hairstyle is, unsurprisingly, based on The Cure’s Robert Smith.

The movie’s title is taken from a track by The Talking Heads and we hear various versions of the song during the course of the movie. The best of these is a live rendition with David Byrne and band at a New York hotspot.

Byrne plays himself in as an old friend of Cheyenne’s. The contrast between the two is stark with the uber-cool DB looking like a fallen angel all in white (hair included) while the lost Cheyenne, dressed from head to toe in black, seems cursed to live out his days frozen in a vague memory of his past glories.

The death of his estranged father reluctantly takes Cheyenne from his retirement mansion in Dublin back to New York. He discovers his father, a holocaust survivor, had an obsession to seek revenge for a humiliation he had suffered in Auschwitz. Intrigued by this story, Cheyenne embarks on an unlikely mission to seek out his father’s persecutor, partly to relieve the tedium of his life and also to belatedly discover something of his estranged father’s past.

Sorrentino said that he took some inspiration from another offbeat road movie , David Lynch’s A Straight Story, and it seemed to me to that he also borrows ideas and themes from David Byrne’s True Stories in that it views quirkier aspects of American life in the same way that an enthusiastic tourist engages with a foreign country. The Holocaust related quest also make me think of the novel and movie Everything Is Illuminated.

The soundtrack is exceptional. It’s always the sign of a director on top of his game when the music works to enhance the visuals rather than serving as some vague, tuneful backdrop. Sorrentino could easily have taken the soft option of a late 70s Goth-Rock mix of Siouxsie & The Banshees, Bauhaus, The Cure, The Mission etc. which might have reflected Cheyenne’s tastes but wouldn’t have fitted in with the story at all. Instead he shows immaculate taste by including songs by Will Oldham (Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy), Vic Chesnutt, Iggy Pop, Jonsì & Alex and Julia Kent.

Great though the movie is, it is by no means flawless.  As a portrait of modern America there’s freshness and humour while the serious parallel plot of the Nazi criminal is far less convincing.

Still, it is easy to overlook such weaknesses in a fresh and humane movie that is by turns touching, funny, sad and unpredictable.

Demons is the second in the series of  four albums in the Nomad series which The Cowboy Junkies began in May 2010 and which they have vowed to complete by November 2011.

On their website they say  “the main reason for wanting to do a series of four albums is that, as we steam through our 25th year, we feel that we have the energy and inspiration to pull it off”.

The first in the series , Renmin Park, was an excellent  set of songs based on Michael Timmins’ experiences in China (you can read my review of this here)

Now comes their much anticipated (by me at least) covers album in tribute to their friend Vic Chesnutt who tragically died by his own hand on  Christmas Day 2009. Continue reading