Spottiswoode’s Wild Goosechase Expedition: A Great Discovery
Spottiswoode & His Enemies’ new album Wild Goosechase Expedition is a throwback to those great art-rock concept albums of the 70s: Dark Side of the Moon, ELO’s Eldorado, the Strawbs’ Grave New World, to name a few. And it ranks right up there with them: if there is any posterity, posterity will view this as not only one of the best albums of 2011 but one of the best of the decade. Songwriter/multi-instrumentalist Jonathan Spottiswoode calls this his Magical Mystery Tour. While the two albums follow a distantly parallel course in places, the music only gets Beatlesque in its trippiest moments. Ostensibly it follows the doomed course of a rock band on tour, a not-so-thinly veiled metaphor for the state of the world today. Most of this is playful, meticulously crafted, Britfolk-tinged psychedelic art-rock and chamber pop – the obvious comparison is Nick Cave, or Marty Willson-Piper. Fearlessly intense, all over the map stylistically, imbued with Spottiswoode’s signature sardonic wit, the spectre of war hangs over much of the album, yet there’s an irrepressible joie de vivre here too. His ambergris baritone inhabits the shadows somewhere between between Nick Cave and Ian Hunter, and the band is extraordinary: lead guitar genius Riley McMahon (also of Katie Elevitch’s band) alternates between rich, resonant textures and writhing anguish, alongside Candace DeBartolo on sax, John Young on bass and Konrad Meissner (of the Silos and, lately, the Oxygen Ponies) on drums.
As much lush exuberance as there is in the briskly strummed title track, Beautiful Monday, there’s a lingering apprehension: “Hoping that one day, we’ll be truly free,” muses Spottiswoode. It sets the tone for much that’s to come, including the next track, Happy Or Not, pensive and gospel-infused. Slowly cresendoing from languid and mysterious to anthemic, the Beatlesque Purple River Yellow Sun follows the metaphorically-charged trail of a wide-eyed crew of fossil hunters. The first real stunner here is All in the Past, a bitter but undeterred rake’s reminiscence shuffling along on the reverb-drenched waves of Spottiswoode’s Rhodes piano:
I was young not so long ago
But that was then and you’ll never know
Who I was, what I did
How we misbehaved
Who we killed
I’ll take that to the grave
The song goes out with a long, echoing scream as adrenalizing as anything Jello Biafra ever put on vinyl.
A bolero of sorts, Just a Word I Use is an invitation to seduction that paints a hypnotic, summery tableau with accordion and some sweet horn charts. A gospel piano tune that sits somewhere between Ray Charles and LJ Murphy, I’d Even Follow You To Philadelphia is deliciously aphoristic – although Philly fans might find it awfully blunt. The gorgeously jangly rocker Sometimes pairs off some searing McMahon slide guitar against a soaring horn chart, contrasting mightily with the plaintive Satie-esque piano intro of Chariot, a requiem that comes a little early for a soldier gone off to war. It’s as potent an antiwar song as has been written in recent years.
All Gone Wrong is a sardonic, two-and-a-half minute rocker that blasts along on a tricky, syncopated beat. The world has gone to completely to hell: “They got religion, we got religion, everything’s religion,” Spottiswoode snarls. Problem Child, with its blend of early 70s Pink Floyd and folk-rock, could be a sarcastic jab at a trust fund kid; Happy Where I Am, the most Beatlesque of all the tracks here vamps and then fades back in, I Am the Walrus style.
This is a long album. The title track (number twelve if you’re counting) might be an Iraq war parable, a creepy southwestern gothic waltz tracing the midnight ride of a crew who seem utterly befuddled but turn absolutely sinister as it progresses: it’s another real stunner, Meissner throwing in some martial drum rolls at the perfect moment. All My Brothers is a bluesy, cruelly sarcastic battlefield scenario: “Only the desert understands, all my brothers lie broken in the sand – freedom, freedom, freedom.” The satire reaches a peak with Wake Me Up When It’s Over: the narrator insists in turning his life over to his manager and his therapist. “Don’t forget to pay the rent…tell me who’s been killed, after all the blood’s been spilled,” its armchair general orders.
McMahon gets to take the intensity as far as it will go with The Rain Won’t Come, a fiery stomping guitar rocker that wouldn’t be out of place on Steve Wynn’s Here Come the Miracles. The album ends on an unexpectedly upbeat note with the one dud here and then the epic, nine-minute You Won’t Forget Your Dream, a platform for a vividly pensive trumpet solo from Kevin Cordt and then a marvelously rain-drenched one from pianist Tony Lauria. All together, these songs make the album a strong contender for best album of the year; you’ll see it on our best albums of 2011 list when we manage to pull it together, this year considerably earlier than December. It’s up now at Spottiswoode’s bandcamp site.
April 26, 2011 - Posted by delarue | Music, music, concert, review, Reviews, rock music | album review, art-rock, beatlesque, britfolk, candace debartolo, dark rock, dark side of the moon, elo eldoraro, folk rock, ian hunter, john young bass, katie elevitch, kevin cordt, konrad meissner, lj murphy, Music, nick cave, orchestrated rock, Oxygen Ponies, psychedelia, psychedelic music, psychedelic rock, ray charles, riley mcmahon, rock anthem, rock music, silos band, Spottiswoode, spottiswoode review, spottiswoode wild goosechase expedition, spottiswoode wild goosechase expedition review, steve wynn, strawbs grave new world, tony lauria piano
1 Comment »
Leave a Reply Cancel reply
About
Visit our new, wilder younger sister blog, New York Music Daily!
This is our “About” page, where you can scroll down for a brief history and explanation of what we do here. To help you get around this site, here are some links which will take you quickly to our most popular features:
Our front page, updated on a daily basis
Our exhaustive, constantly updated guide to over 200 New York City music venues
Our most popular music reviews since 2007
Our 1000 Best Albums of All Time countdown – a work in progress…
Our big hit, the 666 Best Songs of All Time page
This link will take you directly to the most recently updated NYC Live Music Calendar, now a regular monthly feature at New York Music Daily.
Our archives since day one
How to get your music reviewed here
Links to our favorite blogs
Our music index and subcategory indices
Our snarky FAQs and Marginalia page
ABOUT LUCID CULTURE
April, 2007 – Lucid Culture debuts as the online version of a somewhat notorious New York music and politics e-zine, which then ceases publication. After a brief flirtation with blogging about global politics, we begin covering the dark fringes of the New York rock scene that the indie rock blogosphere and the corporate media find too frightening, too smart or too unfashionable. “Great music that’s not trendy” becomes our mantra. For a glimpse of the early years, here’s a somewhat tongue-in-cheek interview with one of Lucid Culture’s founders.
2008-2009 – world music, jazz and classical become an integral part of coverage here. Our 666 Best Songs of All Time list becomes a hit, as do our year-end lists for best songs, best albums and best New York area concerts.
2010 – Lucid Culture steps up coverage of jazz and classical while rock lingers behind.
2011 – one of Lucid Culture’s founding members creates New York Music Daily, a new blog dedicated primarily to rock music coverage from a transgressive New York point of view, with Lucid Culture continuing to cover music that’s typically more lucid and cultured.
2012 – ???
Thanks for stopping by!
-
Recent Comments
-
Archives
- May 2012 (17)
- April 2012 (19)
- March 2012 (21)
- February 2012 (20)
- January 2012 (15)
- December 2011 (17)
- November 2011 (33)
- October 2011 (42)
- September 2011 (48)
- August 2011 (48)
- July 2011 (68)
- June 2011 (61)
-
Categories
- Art
- avant garde music
- baseball
- blues music
- classical music
- concert
- Conspiracy
- Culture
- drama
- experimental music
- Film
- folk music
- funk music
- gospel music
- gypsy music
- interview
- irish music
- jazz
- latin music
- lists
- Lists – Best of 2008 etc.
- Literature
- Live Events
- middle eastern music
- Music
- music, concert
- New York City
- NYC Live Music Calendar
- obituary
- organ music
- philosophy
- photography
- poetry
- Politics
- Public Health
- Rant
- rap music
- reggae music
- review
- Reviews
- rock music
- Science
- ska music
- small beast
- snark
- soul music
- The Blahgues
- theatre
- Uncategorized
- Venues
- world music
-
RSS
Entries RSS
Comments RSS
Pour a scotch
Kick off your boots (or leave ‘em on)
Leave your story behind
Enter into Spottiswoode’s world…
and blend.
My recommendation is to buy the CD.
http://www.cdbaby.com/Artist/SpottiswoodeHisEnemies
Next, explore the older work. This guy is good and continues to get better.