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How much can one fan of OKOM (Our Kind Of Music) accomplish in just a couple of years? Plenty, if it's Rockzilla, aka photographer Michael Johnson. From 2003 to 2005, rockzilla.net was a chronicle of the alt.country scene from a uniquely Texan perspective. But all good things must end, and Rockzilla has retired from the online 'zine scene.

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 Shining a light upon music that matters

 
Fred J Eaglesmith
Dusty
A Major Label
By Michael Hansen

On Fred Eaglesmith's last studio album, Falling Stars and Broken Hearts there's a hidden track. The last listed track, "Your Sister Cried" is pretty much standard Eaglesmith fare; mid-tempo country swing, incisive electric guitar, lashings of pedal steel and Fred's strummed acoustic guitar and acute but careworn lyrics. Around thirty seconds later what do we hear? In the absence of a listing, we'll call it "Thinkin' 'Bout Mary-Ann", and it seems way out there compared with the rest of the recording. Drum machine, a gentle samba groove propelled by electric piano, voice mixed way forward, and all this in an echo drenched atmosphere punctuated by snapping, clicking, booming percussion and ooh-aah, ooh-aah background vocals.

And now we have Dusty, Eaglesmith's latest collection of songs that have been variously described as "a shock", "completely outside of the scope of anything in his prolific discography" and a work that "has brought a bit of dissension into the ranks." A major element in "the ranks" presumably being those aficionados of all things Eaglesmith, the Fredheads.

In some ways "Thinkin' 'Bout Mary-Ann" could be seen as a sign of things to come, a template for the general tone of Dusty that has been stripped back even further, a model that has been refined and tweaked to a level of minimalism that has not been approached on previous Eaglesmith recordings. Dusty was produced by Scott Merritt, who has produced four of Eaglesmith's earlier CDs and here has been given considerable license to leave his own footprint on the album, and a significant one it is.
As well as producing, Merritt is responsible for a raft of instrumentation including gut string guitar, Hammond organ, glockenspiel, Wurlitzer, reed organ, and baritone guitar. Supplementing Merritt's input are assorted bass players, drummers and percussionists and four cellists. Not one of Fred Eaglesmith's touring band, The Flying Squirrels appears on the recording.

Scott Merritt is a protégé of fellow Canadian Daniel Lanois whose work includes production credits for Merritt's own 1979 recording, U2, Willie Nelson and most famously Bob Dylan, on Dylan's two "comeback" records "Oh Mercy" and "Time Out Of Mind". In his book Chronicles; Dylan documents at length the recording of "Oh Mercy". About Lanois, he writes that a particular song "was becoming way too complicated and convoluted. An ambience of texture and atmosphere is what the song called for and what Lanois is so good at all of a sudden I know that I'm in the right place doing the right thing at the right time and Lanois is the right cat."

Listening to the textural sound scapes Merritt has created on Dusty it is clear that the trademark Lanois milieu has significantly shaped Merritt's approach and it would not surprise to hear Fred Eaglesmith declare that Merritt "is the right cat." (or maybe the "right guy". I doubt that "cat" looms large in Fred's patter).

The world that Merritt has constructed for Eaglesmith's characters to inhabit on Dusty has a noir ambience, with low wattage lighting. It's a place of deep shadows, bringing fear and disorientation, loneliness, heartbreak and helplessness.
So, is this a Scott Merritt record or a Fred Eaglesmith record? Never has Eaglesmith been this exposed in his studio career. The stripped back atmosphere, the absence of his band, and the reliance on rudimentary keyboard rhythm tracks, organ, cellos and simple instrumentation to populate the background challenges him to produce the goods vocally and lyrically. Is he up to the task, does he pull it off? The answer in both cases is an unequivocal yes. Dusty is radical, daring and brilliant. It's a moving and convincing recording, and I love it.

This departure from the "norm" should come as no surprise when Eaglesmith's back catalogue is considered. The furious picking, the country rave­ups, the sardonic humour, the cars, tractors, trains and machines large and small are all elements of the many faceted Eaglesmith package, but over the long haul it has always been the songs that have been paramount. Eaglesmith's song stories of the fringe dwellers, the loners, and those who walk the line have always been perceptive, often profound and frequently heartbreaking. His hallmark capacity to draw vivid cinematic chronicles involving ordinary but desperate characters on the edge in works like "Rodeo Boy", "Water in the Fuel" and "49 Tons", and his unaffected ability to tell their tales in his careworn, sometimes gruff, but always honest to goodness voice are both abundantly in evidence on Dusty.

Eaglesmith has been quoted as saying that recently revisiting some pre-Beatles music including Roy Orbison, Dusty Springfield, Jimmy Webb and Mickey Newbury, has provided some of the stylistic inspiration for his approach to writing Dusty. This is not to say that he has given us a "MacArthur Park", but certainly the ambience of songs like Webb's "One Lady" and "The Moon's A Harsh Mistress" and Newbury's "All My Trials" is reflected in this latest collection.

Eaglesmith's songs on Dusty are replete with tales of broken dreams and lost souls inhabiting a world of sometimes profound sadness and resignation. Over solemn strings the title track tells the tale of someone just released from prison. The landscape confronting him is bleak and unforgiving :

"Across the mesa
The daylight shines
In your eyes
And it makes you blind"

Stately cellos and flute like organ add to the melancholy of the almost spoken vocal. Release from prison offers little respite from loneliness and alienation. Although a free man, he seems eternally trapped:

You're just Dusty now
There's flies on you
Your guns are rusty
And your soul is too
The Texas is wearing off
Of your leather boots
You're just Dusty now
There's flies on you

"Tunnel" is somewhat more upbeat in comparison. An infectious samba-like drum loop punctuated with music­box chiming sets up a tale of selfless support and fidelity. On each occasion that the protagonist is vulnerable the girl is there for him.

And when I stumbled
And I fell
She'd light the light
At the end of the tunnel

Having "seen the flame" he is able to reciprocate, to light her way. But is it enough? I guess we'll never know, but he's done all he can.

Now she's standing
In the darkness
A shattered world
She's broken hearted
I light the light
I light the light
I light the light
At the end of the tunnel

Not only has the light been lit in the narrative, but also the hope implicit in the act is emphasised in the instrumentation, which builds throughout with acoustic guitars and back up vocalists culminating in a drum and string driven finale.

"I-75" is North America's Interstate 75, traversing 1800 miles across six states from Michigan in the north to Florida in the south. It is a metaphorical river of dreams for the disillusioned, a symbol of hope and a means of escape for the trapped. On the highway we encounter "old station wagons, driven by women with too many kids", and "some long distance trucker, hunched over the wheel", and all look to the I-75 to take them somewhere else, somewhere away from their "situation".

And the river of cars
They fall like stars
Down the I- 75

The seekers find no relief, no promised land. In his book "Roads", Larry McMurtry travels America's interstates. He writes about the necessity for human contact being eliminated along the interstates. "It is now possible to drive coast to coast without speaking to a human being at all: you just slide your card, pump your gas, buy a couple of Hershey bars, perhaps heat up a burrito, and put the pedal back to the metal." This de-humanization confronts our I-75 travellers. For them it's a bleak world of "broken headlights", "busted speedometers", "engines that blow", compounded by "citations, warnings and fines." And still, the river of cars fall like stars, down the I-75, as they surely always will.

Melancholy organ and strummed acoustic guitar where the left-hand string squeaks are an integral part of the instrumentation set up a gospel feel on "Ship". This is a tale of the lost, lonely and confused, adrift and homeless. Eaglesmith's anguished plea for an emotional landfall intensifies amid swelling organ and driving percussion. The organ is particularly effective, bringing a hymn like quality to the song, underscoring the distressed prayer for guidance.

Lord I'm beat up and I'm broken
And my light is getting dim
Lord if you could find me
A place to land
My ship needs to come in

"Rainbow" is a lovely, but heartbreaking song that gives us Eaglesmith's most moving and evocative vocal performance on Dusty. There's no self-assured swagger here but a bewildered vulnerability. A tick-tock rhythm track overlaid with beautiful strings and chiming glockenspiel mirror the fragile demeanour of the singer in his search for explanations. A litany of rhetorical questions exercises his confounded mind.

What are you supposed to do
When your rainbow breaks in two
And all you're left with is a half

And how can you carry on
When you've been stolen from
By the very one who said she'd be true

Are these questions answerable? Probably not conclusively, but here stoicism and resignation with a dash of hope are the order of the day.

Pick up half a rainbow
Throw it over your shoulder
Tell her you're glad
That it's finally over
And find another rainbow
That you can link up to
That's what you're supposed to do.

"Rainbow" is indicative of why Fred Eaglesmith is a significant artist rather than just a good one. The insight of his lyrics and his eye for the emotional train wreck that looms so large in the lives of ordinary folks are underpinned by a fundamental tenderness and empathy. Although at times shrouded by the gruff exterior, the sardonic humour and the cowboy bluster, these qualities remain the creative foundation of his best work.

Along with the title track, "Wichita" and later "Codeine" could almost be Cormack McCarthy or Annie Proulx stories. The acuity with which Eaglesmith captures the essence of the American west with its heart-wrenching beauty set against unforgiving brutality, is no less telling than the work of either author. McCarthy's characters who "rode out the remnant night in a deep blue sink with the new day falling down about them" could be the old man and the fourteen year old boy in "Wichita" traversing Kansas and Oklahoma with a runaway horse in a broke down truck and trailer. The truck has "split windows and busted wipers" and the pair takes comfort from the "Wichita gospel radio, (that) played all the country songs that you've ever known." This familiarity is inevitably short lived as the radio signal fades:

And we'd shut it off
And listen to the wild horses
Stampeding through the ranges
Of our mind

"Codeine" is the tale of a down and out old cowboy whose physical capabilities are diminishing rapidly due to age, illness, infirmity, an excess of alcohol and medicine.

You keep falling in and out of your broken saddle
And there's so many knots you've forgotten how to tie"

The old man is a relic of a different era. His plight is compounded by the encroachment of fences, barbed wire, survey stakes and machines, invaders that relentlessly change his prairie home forever, and with it, his way of life and that of his cohorts.

And the sight of those machines could start you crying
And the sounds keep you up in the night"

Dusty is without doubt a quantum leap stylistically for Fred Eaglesmith. There are no Mighty Big Cars, or Ten Ton Chains, and not one Blue Tick Hound in sight. We're not urged to Rev It Up, it's not Time to Get a Gun, and there will be no Dancin' on the Bar. In place of the frequently raucous, often ass-kicking, but always perceptive alt-country twang and bar room bluster, we have a set of finely crafted songs that are plainspoken, brimming with pathos, and musically eloquent.
For Eaglesmith, Dusty is as radical a recording as Nebraska was for Bruce Springsteen and Train A Comin' was for Steve Earle. For Springsteen and Earle those recordings have come to be recognised as indicators of those artists' creative maturity and as benchmarks against which future work and the works of others are measured. And so it should be for Fred Eaglesmith and Dusty. It's a mature, powerful and sharply rendered statement of his craft.

www.amlrecords.com
www.fredeaglesmith.com

Contact Michael Hansen at hansen-at-rockzilla.net

 

 
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