19 November 2008
tell your friends...
Words by Sean Moeller // Illustration by Johnnie Cluney // Sound engineering by Mike Gentry
One year ago, The Broken West released an album entitled I Can’t Go On, I’ll Go On and it was bursting with the kinds of harmonies that come of holy waters of the American West and the kinds of allusions to suns setting over placid lakes and ponds, crickets howling into a black desert night, and healthy glows raging all over everyone’s bodies. It is the kind of album that people take to the twilight banks of sand for skinny-dipping rendezvous-ing and for getting moderately drunk without the assistance of any sort of alcoholic beverage. It’s a stunning piece of pop rock and roll that is the epitome of idyllic California – all of the places in the state that Los Angeles is not. … [Story Continues Below]
SYNOPSIS
For this Daytrotter session, the guiding ethos was re-arranging the songs. For our first session, we basically just played the songs live as we do at shows. But this time around we wanted to experiment and have a bit more fun, so we tried to re-work each song so it was different than how it is on the record.
First song
House of Lies (Broken West) [3.60MB] [1335 downloads]
– original version appears on Now Or Heaven
This one is pretty similar to the record except we changed up the drum pattern quite a bit. We have a new drummer — a guy named Sean McDonald. Sean had this idea for a pattern and went for it, and we followed him.
Second song
Gwen, Now and Then (Broken West) [3.28MB] [1338 downloads]
– original version appears on Now Or Heaven
When we first started rehearsing this song during the sessions for the new record, it had this really strong, driving drum part. Kind of like The Cure’s “Close to Me”. But then the song got really stripped down — we lost that beat and ended up using this drum loop for most of the track. I’m happy with the way it turned out on the record, but we thought it would be fun to go back to that big beat. So we came into the Daytrotter session knowing that we wanted to try it that way; that’s about the only thing we knew we wanted to do for sure. Then Danny came up with this really awesome, percussive guitar part on the fly, and it all sort of came together. I really like the way it turned out — I’d kind of like to play it like this live from time to time.
Third song
Perfect Games (Broken West) [4.21MB] [1573 downloads]
– original version appears on Now Or Heaven
I don’t know how we hit upon this idea, but we decided to try “Perfect Games” as sort of a Stonesy, blue-eyed soul kind of thing. I think Danny played an electric dobro on this? He came up with this great Keith Richards-esque rhythm part. This was a lot of fun to do. About a week after the Daytrotter session, we played at our booking agent’s wedding on Cape Cod. We did a set of about nine songs — eight were covers then we played this arrangement of “Perfect Games.”
Fourth song
Ambuscade (Broken West) [3.60MB] [1314 downloads]
– original version appears on Now Or Heaven
If I remember correctly, “Ambuscade” ended up sounding closest to the version on the record than any other song we did. However, what was really cool about this is that we basically tracked it with one microphone, I believe. Danny and Brian and I were huddled around that one mic, and I think all three of us were playing acoustics and singing. It was kind of our bluegrass moment. Keysman Jeff Howell played Wurlitzer, I think, and Sean was on drums. We had an opportunity recently, at CMJ, to do an acoustic set, with just the three of us playing and singing. It was a real thrill. I’d like to do more of that.
It’s more about those big, towering redwoods, the majestic capes that hug onto the ocean, the forgotten natural escapes and the freedom of temptation, a Laurel Canyon experience where there’s a slept-in feeling comingling with pot and cigarette smoke and alert skin. It was teeming with the sort of first impression splendor, though Ross Flournoy, Dan Iead and Brian Whelan weren’t rank amateurs of impressions out there on the coast. They were not soaking it in for the first time and getting silly on all that they observed. It just felt that way and though there were plenty of reminiscent moments of unfortunate run-ins with love and the like, the album maintained such a strong hold on the carefree idea of California living. Sometimes an album, like it or not, just captures a sense and plants you in a premonition or an assumption of somewhere that’s more fiction than truth as far as hands-on experience goes. The West Coast – other than the glitz and glamour of Hollywood and Los Angeles – has always held sway with dreamers and romantics and sometimes the dreams are accurate. The songs never lie and so the feeling is perpetuated on and on like some endless kiss. On the group’s sophomore release, Now Or Heaven, it’s something that’s completely different from what was heard before and yet it’s not a diversion that takes us the long way around to what it originally established as its trademark brilliance with hooks aplenty and an inviting convoy of hummability and blazing riffs on that first record. It’s still The Broken West doing time with its chief mistress, but it’s more of a jaded, or rather jilted man’s record, where most of that bright beaming buzz has been rubbed out with the sole of a roughed up boot. These are fellows who have barnstormed all over the world and let’s just forget that they’re out there playing their songs in front of people – the main reason that they’re out there on those roads. The newest album allows us a chance to consider these men as if they’d been through the trenches, had the bottoms drop out of all kinds of emotional roller coasters along the way. They set out with eyes wide open, the size of bulls, and when they returned and were able to debrief, they sat slumped with bags under those bloodshot eyes and scattered about them were remnants of what they’d missed and who’d missed them when they were gone. There are friends scoffing at the lives that they’re living. There are women telling them that they’ve changed and they insist that they’ve done nothing of the sorts, that all is just as it’s always been. Everything’s set in a little more firmly and the honeymoon has become a waning moon, an object that’s now half as lovely. The nights are colder and the people are stranger. The women of these characters’ lives have moved on. Flournoy sings twice on the album about diamonds, once in reference to trying to impossibly find one in a bag of ice and another time sitting around looking for flaws in them as they spill the ice from their drink glasses onto the lawn, as if the scene could use a bittersweet symphony to emphasize the conflict that’s been dealt. There’s a considerable amount of heartache and disillusion coming to light, and a movement of the brutal truth to the head of the table to start sermonizing away those pastoral glows.
The Broken West Official Site
Merge Records
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