Author: andrea Page 26 of 71

Unrepentant Anglophile, a music obsessive with a fetish for luxuriously packaged objects, and an armchair traveler.

The Shady Circle

KH3

Kristin Hersh
The Shady Circle
Franklin, MA

I recently stumbled across a blog post about Kristin Hersh that referred to her as “not terribly prolific.” I’m not really sure which KH this author of said post was referring to, because the KH I’m familiar with is a constant whirlwind of creative activity. At this very moment, she’s working on a memoir and accompanying multimedia stage presentation called Paradoxical Undressing (recently premiered at this year’s Edinburgh Fringe); her next solo record, Speedbath; new 50 Foot Wave material; and a long-awaited follow-up to her 1998 collection of Appalachian folk songs and murder ballads. Oh, and there’s that unsubstantiated but highly probable rumor of an upcoming Throwing Muses record. Phew. I’m tired just thinking about the multi-tasking required to keep that many creative projects running concurrently.

If that weren’t enough, she recently embarked on a new solo venture called the Shady Circle, eschewing the unappetizing club circuit for the lower-key, far more welcoming world of house concerts. Last Sunday night, about 25 of us had the privilege of hanging out, drinking apple cider and eating cookies with Kristin and her husband Billy O’Connell. We were having such a good time hanging out, in fact, that Billy practically had to drag us all into the other room, jolting us with a loud “Hey, isn’t there supposed to be a concert?”

We all decamped to the cozy living room to find Kristin shyly perched on a chair in the corner, a guitar resting in her lap, the muted candlelight setting the properly eerie tone for a night of intense, often macabre songs. “You can tell which songs aren’t mine,” she joked. “I don’t sing about killing my girlfriends. And they’re not about Jesus.”

Maybe not, but the singular intensity of Kristin’s performances has always struck me as spiritually ecstatic, so pure is her vision. When Throwing Muses started out as a teenage band, the undeniably powerful, off-kilter muscularity of Kristin’s music was startling, even to the group —like a storm that needed unleashing.

The storm’s calmed down a bit since then. These days, Kristin’s a relaxed, genuinely funny performer, cracking jokes and regaling us with stories between songs. Which is not to say that there weren’t any edges to her performance, or that she’s become in some way complacent. Not at all. She’s just found a new kind of equilibrium. And no-one sings songs about zombie brides quite like she does.

I’ve seen K. a lot. I’ve seen her in London, New York, San Francisco, Providence, Boston —just about everywhere. And I remember a special little something from every one of those performances. At a club show, the performer is inevitably put on a pedestal, and it skews the vibe of the show —gives it a worshipful air, no matter how down-to-earth the performer. This night was made special not just by the music, but the overall vibe —all of us felt like old friends who’d been brought together by their favorite music. It was an absolutely lovely evening. And if that sounds incredibly dorky, well, I’m a dork. And I’m okay with that.

Thanks to Kristin & Billy for making it such a special night. And big thanks to Tine & her family for making us feel at home and for being such gracious hosts.

***

I’ll leave you with some music: two songs from a full band with strings performance in Pittsburgh last year, and one song from K’s recent mammoth undertaking of recording an A-Z songset spanning her entire career. All 5 discs are available (as a box set and separately) here.

If you like what you hear, I humbly ask that you please leave a little something in K’s tip jar. (It’s over to the right, above the Amazon logo.)

Twitter: Kristin Hersh | Kristin Hersh [official site]

MP3Kristin Hersh, “Hook in Her Head”, Live in Pittsburgh, May 26, 2007

MP3Kristin Hersh, “Sugarbaby”, Live in Pittsburgh, May 26, 2007

MP3Kristin Hersh, “Pearl” [from 10-4 Volume 3]

PHOTO BY DINA DOUGLASS

Awesome Color

Robshaw

W-S Burn| Lois Maffeo (wiki)| | Os Mutantes (Myspace)| Richard AMP| AMP

MP3AMP/Third Eye Foundation, “Ombres” [from AMP/3EF/Sadaar Bazaar split 7”, 1996]

MP3ICU, “Fortune Cookie” [from Selector Dub Nation, 1998]

MP3Os Mutantes, “Panis et Circenses (Reprise)” [from Tecnicolor, 2006]

MP3Courtney Love, “Don’t Mix the Colors” [from Rock Stars Kill, 1994]

MP3W-S Burn, “The Inverted Color Wheel of Love” [from One Egg’s Way of Becoming Other Eggs]

IMAGES: JOHN ROBSHAW TEXTILES

Short Attention Span Theatre

Tropicalia

Listening to
Oh, sequels. They unilaterally suck, right? David Byrne and Brian Eno have sidestepped the whole thorny issue by following-up their legendary 1981 collagist-funk masterpiece My Life in the Bush of Ghosts with something completely different in tone — namely, Everything That Happens Will Happen Today, an optimistic, brimming-over pop record with duties neatly split between Eno (music) and Byrne (words + singing). Done exclusively via email, the results have their own quirky, laid-back charm. Available via download on August 18th. Also released this week: Byrne’s Big Love: Hymnals.

Reading
Urban Outfitters’ ubiquitous album cover frames are a thoroughly depressing curio, because to me they suggest nothing so much as the lost heyday of the album. Despite being mute objects, their very existence raises a valid point: Who listens to a record all the way through anymore? I reluctantly raise my hand while decrying the depressing state of affairs. I, too, have fallen victim to the relentless iPod-ification of the long-playing LP —this mixtape culture we live in.

Black Dog must have been thinking along the same lines when they green-lit Old Rare New, an oversize tome dedicated to rapturous recollections of the (nearly) endangered species, the Record Store. It looks like great fun, with contributions from fans like Chan Marshall, Bonnie Prince Billy, St Etienne’s Bob Stanley, and The Wire’s Byron Coley. (Old Rare New, Emma Pettit, editor. US $29.95.)

Watching
Guy Maddin’s delirious Brand Upon The Brain (Criterion). Or at least, I will be, just as soon as Amazon sees fit to send it my way. (Such are the perils of the free shipping option.)

Everything That Happens| David Byrne (official site)| | Big Love Hymnal | Brand Upon the Brain!| Old Rare New

MP3David Byrne & Brian Eno, “America Is Waiting” [from My Life in the Bush of Ghosts, 1981]

MP3David Byrne & Brian Eno, “Strange Overtones” [from Everything That Happens Will Happen Today, 2008]

PHOTO BY ANDREA FELDMAN, “TROPICALIA, NYC”

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