This song singlehandedly talked me into buying all of her records. John and Joey from Calexico were the nucleus of the backing band, giving the familiar folk-rock elements  startling and surprising turns. Every phrase in this song sets a scene and tells a story, and no one but her could sing them. Pitchfork interviewed her in 2006 and she had a thing or two to say about the lyrics.

The Soul of the Parish is Making

Written by one Fr. Andrew O'Connor of the Bronx, New York. Because this page is a horribly-designed semi-iframe content wrapper piece of junk, I’ve taken the liberty of copying it to this page here. A lot of people are talking this way nowadays—getting back to local, sustainable economies; fostering community and charity by making stuff; recovering a crucial part of our humanity by working with our bodies. But only Christianity—in its denial of self and its teleology of uniting soul and body, heaven and earth, God and man—actually has the weight to ballast this sort of endeavor. I might niggle with one or two things O'Connor has written here, but altogether, I’m really digging this.

Some American parishes dabble in T-shirts and cause-related goods, but this is more of a reflection of affluence and leisure than necessity. These ventures are not brave enough. We need to begin living in a new way tapping into our ancient beliefs and practices: making something out of little or nothing, building sacred dependency on one another, imbuing the ordinary desiderata of life with intelligence and the savor of love.

Sam Beam's Tiny Desk Concert

Sam Beam’s songs sound a lot better in this stripped-down form. A friend of mine said that Beam is probably this generation’s Dave Matthews. From what I’ve heard of the new record, he’s certainly in danger of that. Some singers need to add more to their songs, but Beam’s songs just don’t do well when weighed down beneath layers of studio. I’m looking at you Shepherd’s Dog, and I’m glowering at you, new record out tomorrow. I’m no encase-it-in-amber purist; I like it when songwriters stretch their sound. But Beam hasn’t taken his music in a very interesting or necessary direction, nor has the sound he’s alighted upon done his otherwise precise songs any justice.

As a side note, his brief asides in between songs concerning songwriting are worth listening to; they underscore his care as a writer and how needlessly overproduced his records are getting to be.

I believe that the records that played in the background when you were a kid determine, to a large extent, the kind of music you’ll listen to when you’re an adult. Even those who react against what they were raised with (lots of my buddies had to listen to some pretty horrid “Christian” music in their nonage), I think, are still drawn to music that sounds similar on some level. I won’t take any more time defending this thesis; I’ll just say that I’ve observed this at work in almost everyone I know.

Two recordings founded my own record collection. First, the cassette version of Neil Young’s Harvest b/w After the Gold Rush: from thence comes my taste in classic country, classic rock, country-rock, folk music—and so on. Second, Talking Heads’ Stop Making Sense. This album cultivated in me a taste for intelligent, danceable music and—despite it being a live record—the use of the recording studio as an instrument. One cassette or the other was always playing whenever my family would pile in for a car ride of any length. By the time I was 15, both were worn out completely and unceremoniously discarded in favor of the CD versions.

Save for the sacred and classical music weighing down my CD shelves and portions of iTunes (owed to Arvo Pärt’s Te Deum and years of singing in choirs), every record I own now is traceable to the imprint of those two records. There’s a secondary layer of massively-influential albums—Combat Rock, I Care Because You Do, Darkness on the Edge of Town—but they themselves clearly descend from my two primary sources.

It should be really obvious which record got me listening to LCD Soundsystem.

The Maldives are stupendous 8-man band from Seattle. They played at Birds on a Wire in March 2010, and it was all the theater could do to contain them; something I read about them somewhere described their sound as “Epic Americana”, which just about nails it. “Blood Relations” was one of the most visceral moments in the show—pure rock power that stirred everyone’s blood to move faster, singer Jason Dodson howling beautifully over the band’s astonishing four-axe attack. The song is about the shadow a father casts over his son and his son’s sons. Somebody somewhere is standing on his grave, but all of my children are carrying his name, goes the refrain. It’s a song for men; it gets at the ambivalence that grips us all, at some point, about our fathers. Sadly, most men who put this struggle in their work only wallow in it, never getting anywhere. But “Blood Relations”, I think, is the sound of a man fighting through it, grasping for the peace he knows that is to be had with his father’s shadow—no matter how elusive it may seem.

Buckner’s Since is my favorite record of his this week. “Ariel Ramirez” might be his most famous song (one friend says that no song better describes the hole at the center of that man) but “Faithful Shooter” is probably what really roped me in to the entire album. As always, it’s Buckner’s lyrics that really get at me; if poetry is a concentrated excess of language, they are poetry (even if the subject is ultimately rather maudlin…). These lines really struck me:

You looked up to her window from the backyard dusk/Hired as a shot, lingered as a crush

See I’ve only had a photograph to drag around

Would you take another trip with a candle like her/Strike another promise and watch it burn?