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Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit
Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit
Jason Isbell & the 400 Unit Here We Rest (Lightning Rod Records) Release date: April 12th Here We Rest: The first motto of Jason Isbell's home state got changed in the early part of last century to a Latin phrase that translates to "we dare defend our rights". What starts out as peaceful idyll descends into a defensive posture with the threat of bellicosity just beneath the surface. That's what tough times will do to a people. Jason Isbell's home is northern Alabama, a region that has been hit especially hard in the recent economic downturn. "The mood here has darkened considerably," says Jason. "There is a real culture around Muscle Shoals, Florence and Sheffield of family, of people taking care of their own. When people lose their ability to do that, their sense of self dissolves. It has a devastating effect on personal relationships, and mine were not immune." The characters that populate Here We Rest are wrung out. In "Alabama Pines", the protagonist has found himself on the outside of the life he once knew. He is living in a small room and in a state of emotional disrepair - estranged from the woman that he loved, as well as friends ("I don't even need a name anymore/When no one calls it out, it kinda vanishes away"). He is beginning to recognize that his own remoteness and obstinacy has played a large part in his current state of affairs, and longs for "someone to take him home through those Alabama pines." He's not quite clear how to get back there himself. Place plays a prominent role in the songs on Here We Rest. Jason was home considerably more this year, having toured less in 2010. After being on the road for 200 or more days for more years than he cares to count, he stayed home mostly to write and record this album. "I could probably live anywhere, but I love it here," says Jason. "Being home is very different than being on the road. You learn a certain discipline that has its entire context within the touring lifestyle. This was the first time that I've been an adult in my own house, in my own community. Plus on the road, you have your whiskey waiting for you when you get to the gig. Here you have to go get it." Spending all that time around his hometown, he could reacquaint himself with the locale and immerse himself with the rhythms of life in northern Alabama. "Being able to sit on my stool at D.P.'s, a bar in the building I live in, talk to my friends, and hear the problems that they have helped inform some of these songs." Sometimes, people in that bar grow tired of hearing others bitch when they themselves were on the edge, and it would sometimes lead to fights. "Save It For Sunday" grew out of one of those experiences. A bar patron, unsure of the solidity of his relationship, tells his fellow bar patron that "we got cares of our own," and suggesting that the he save his sorrows for his "choir and everyone" at his church. Our military draws disproportionately from areas that are economically depressed, and northern Alabama has more than its share of those that have served, not only out of a deep sense of patriotism, but also because of shrinking employment options. In "Tour Of Duty," Jason writes of a soldier that is coming home from war for the last time, and will try, more than likely in vain, to assimilate back into civilian life. His soldier is voracious for normalcy. He admits to not knowing or caring how his loved one has changed and dreams of eating chicken wings and starting a family. But there's a subtle sense that this craving for normalcy will cause him to suppress the damage done to him during wartime: "I promise not to bore you with my stories/I promise not to scare you with my tears/I never would exaggerate the glory/I'll seem so satisfied here." Seeming satisfied is not being satisfied, but it's the best he can imagine. The time off from the road also had an effect on the musical sensibilities that shaped this album. Jason was able to collaborate with more artists (he played on the latest albums by Justin Townes Earle, Middle Brother, Abby Owens and Coy Bowles), which broadened his ideas about how he could present his own music. "I always felt like certain things, like my guitar playing, had to be perfect, and when I was in the studio environment, I could make sure that it was. But looking back, it might have robbed the music of a certain amount of spontaneity. There's more out and out rock and roll guitar on this album." In addition, Jason embraces a more acoustic, more traditional country music sound to a degree that he had been reluctant to in the past. "When you come from Alabama, that country soul music is in the water. I've always loved it and been proud of it, but there's always been this sense of proving that you were capable of more than just that. If I was going to create an album that gave listeners a sense of the place, I felt it was important to let the songs go there if they wanted to." The time at home has also had an effect on the lyrical point of view of the album. Because of the subject material of the album, Jason wrote from a more empathetic point of view than ever before. "I tried more than ever to get out from behind my own eyes and see things through others' eyes," he says. In "We've Met," Jason puts himself in the place of a person that was left behind in their hometown and, with a tinge of bitterness, remembers the one who went away better than they are remembered (Jason says, "I'm quite sure that I've been the person that didn't remember before, and I hate it"). As with the last album, the 400 Unit shines. Keyboard player Derry deBorja, guitarist Browan Lollar, bassist Jimbo Hart and drummer Chad Gamble play with either the ferocity or subtlety that the songs call for. Having played over four hundred shows together as a band have given Jason and the guys an innate sense of one another; they are gelling into a truly great band. The original state motto was written by Alexander Beaufort Meek, a former Alabama attorney general, in his 1842 essay outlining the history of the state. The last lines of that history say: "We have shown the condition and character of our population; the Red Sea of trials and suffering through which they had to pass; the fragile bark that floated in triumph through the perils of the tide....From such rude and troublous beginnings, the present population of Alabama, acquired the right to say, 'Here we rest!'" The times are indeed rude and troublous again in Alabama, and Jason Isbell's inspired album offers both documentation and the same fervent hope that his people will find their rest.
http://www.myspace.com/jasonisbellmusic
Maria Taylor
Before you listen to her new album, Maria Taylor suggests you prepare yourself. Listen to it, she says "in a dark room, with a candle or two with headphones, maybe in the bath, but definitely horizontal."
Though much of the deliciously diverse LadyLuck is inspired by the end of a relationship, it's not dripping with sadness and grief, nor is it in-your-face empowering. Rather, Taylor strikes a stunning balance between melancholy (aching strings, hushed vocals) and uplifting (rolling rhythms, shimmering keys), highlighted by sharp lyrics that draw optimism out of sadness. This is not a woman down on her luck.
LadyLuck, Taylor's third solo effort, is about "personal growth and the change that comes with it," she says. Much of the album was written as Taylor was preparing for a move (to Los Angeles) and immediately after arriving. "This change in my life was so so needed," she says, "that, whereas lots of older songs have happy words but a sad undertone, these songs have sad words but with hopeful undertones of renewal."
Change is something Taylor has welcomed in her career, which started at age 15 in the Birmingham, AL-based band Little Red Rocket. Taylor later became one-half of the dream pop band Azure Ray and left in 2005 to strike out on her own. "I just listen to my gutalways," she says of the move. "Something said it's time to try something different." In 2005 she released the bold and critically-acclaimed solo album 11:11 which featured vocals by Conor Oberst. In 2007 she delivered Lynn Teeter Flower, which showcased her growth as a solo artist, as well as her aptitude for inventive beats and featured Doug Easley (Cat Power, Pavement) and Spoon's Jim Eno.
On LadyLuck, Taylor changes things again, trading beat-centric tracks for more guitar and vocals (though she does get behind the drums on "It's Time"). As on previous albums, she works with Now It's Overhead's Andy LeMaster as well as new contributor, REM's Michael Stipe, both of whom collaborated on the album's final track, "Cartoons and Forever Plans."
First single "Time Lapse Lifetime," with its orchestral strings and grand melody, is about how fast life moves and how in a moment everything can change. Appropriately, the song is punctuated by both a driving beat and lingering plaintive vocals, with breaks of near-silence for poignant turns of phrase. "Oh, we dreamed a life / and it was just like that, and just like that it's gone," Taylor sings as lone strings fade out. Intimate, earnest, and complex, LadyLuck is Taylor's most stunning effort to date. Whether you listen to it in the dark or light, with headphones or on the stereo, horizontal, vertical, or diagonal, LadyLuck will move you to cry, to dance, to sing, and everything in between.
http://www.myspace.com/mariataylor
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LocationHigh Noon Saloon
701 E. Washington Ave
Madison, WI 53703
United States
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