Posts Tagged ‘Goths’

Listen to John Darnielle’s early solo Mountain Goats albums — those raw-nerved, stripped-bare, white-knuckle, guy-and-guitar recordings he committed to warped cassette tapes all those years ago — it’s hard to imagine all the creative side roads he’d one day follow. In the years since a polished band slowly materialized around him, Darnielle has filled out his discography with ambitious concept records like a mournful and fatalistic set of songs named for Bible verses (2009’s The Life Of The World To Come) and 2015’s Beat The Champ, in which Darnielle delves into the little-known underworld of pro wrestling.

For the Mountain Goats‘ 16th full-length album, Goths, Darnielle once again takes a conceptual detour. As its title suggests, it’s about growing up goth — about establishing a place for yourself among other outcasts — but it also finds the band shedding guitars and adding a fourth permanent member in multi-instrumentalist Matt Douglas. Each of those changes proves important: Thematically rich enough to encompass everything from radio-sound tracked summer road trips to memories of drugs and debauchery to the lessons learned from the splintering of the band Gene Loves Jezebel, Goths makes bold moves in its subtly vibrant sound, which here revolves largely around piano and Douglas‘ woodwind arrangements.

On many of the Mountain Goats‘ most recent records, bassist Peter Hughes, drummer Jon Wurster and an assortment of gifted producers have helped give Darnielle’s compositions a curiously pristine, sometimes muted quality, and Goths continues in that vein. But the band has never seemed quite as peppy it does in spots here. Though the album opens with “Rain In Soho,” in which members of the Nashville Symphony Chorus provide a doomy backdrop for Darnielle’s dark and gripping observations, elsewhere, playfulness emerges in the sound.

In “The Grey King And The Silver Flame Attunement,” Goths’ themes of aging in the underground are summed up beautifully in seven ambivalent words (“I’m hardcore / But I’m not that hardcore”), which Darnielle sings in a tentative whisper as woodwinds whistle and lilt alongside him. There’s a sunny quality, in both the words and the arrangement, that can only upend expectations. Similarly, the mission statement “Wear Black” sways along with a doo-wop vibe that keeps darkness at arms’ length. For John Darnielle, goth isn’t a sound or a style so much as a state of mind: a source of comfort and connection for the young and lost, sure, but it needn’t leave your side as you age, either.

John Darnielle was a goth kid. Maybe not as regards Siouxsie Sioux levels of cool-goth, but enough to wear a little black eyeliner and sport a gloomy undertaker look. “A bad undertaker, I guess, because a good undertaker doesn’t remind you of death,” he tells laughing.

For Goths, Darnielle and The Mountain Goats don’t so much mine the bleakly romantic sounds of say a Sisters Of Mercy or The Birthday Party, but explore what it means to grow old in goth and, by extension, grow old in any youthful outcast culture.

Joined by members of the Nashville Symphony Chorus, album opener “Rain In Soho” is a pounding barnburner chorale that has more in common with the over-the-top theatrics of ’70s arena-rock than the soul-tinged soft-rock that unexpectedly permeates Goths. When Darnielle sings, “No one knows where the lone wolf sleeps / No one sees the hidden treasure in the castle keep,” the choir responds with a sassy “No, no, no, no, like a ’60s girl group. “Rain In Soho” paints a bleak-but-loving picture of a nightclub London goths called home in the ’80s and that goths worldwide sought out in reports from friends and magazines. “You could meet someone who’s lost like you,” Darnielle sings. “Revel in the darkness like a pair of open graves / Fumble through the fog for a season or two.”

Goths wrestles with impermanence and the past with a mixture of humor and empathy for which Darnielle has become known. It’s a different sort of record for The Mountain Goats and is quickly becoming a new favorite of mine.

From the album Goths, out May 19th, 2017 on Merge Records.

Let’s start with this. The Mountain Goats who are releasing a new album. It is, as any fan of the band will expect, a heartbreaking and heart reviving album about imperfect people described perfectly, with melodies that will stay with you for days.  Ever-wonderful Mountain Goats return with a new album Goths, due out on 19th May .

It is a particularly appropriate/nostalgic title for those of us of a certain age who were in the thick of the original Goth movement, all black with purple hints, eyeliner and gloom all pervading and its capital in the heart of the north of England remembering bands like the Mission and Sisters Of Mercy.

It is summed up perfectly by the first single Andrew Eldritch Is Moving Back To Leeds, of which John Darnielle has to say of the undisputed godfather of Goth, “In the lyric, I imagine one of my teenage heroes, Andrew Eldritch, returning to the town where the band worked and played when they were young. His friends give him a hard time about ending up back where he started, but not because they’re mad: it’s good to see an old friend wearing the marks of time on his hands and face like well-loved tattoos. So shall it be in these times: your sons and your daughters will prophesy, your old men will dream dreams, your young men will see visions, and Andrew Eldritch, whose music has reached spirits in every corner of the globe, will move back to Leeds.”

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John Darnielle: vocals, piano, Fender Rhodes
Peter Hughes: bass, vocals
Matt Douglas: woodwinds, vocals, additional keys
Jon Wurster: drums and percussion