The Handsome Family - Scattered: A Further Collection of Lost Demos, Orphaned Songs and Odd Covers (2010)
Artist: The Handsome Family
Title: Scattered: A Further Collection of Lost Demos, Orphaned Songs and Odd Covers
Year Of Release: 2010
Label: Self-Released
Genre: Alternative, Country Rock
Quality: 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks+cue, log)
Total Time: 63:47
Total Size: 153 mb / 385 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Title: Scattered: A Further Collection of Lost Demos, Orphaned Songs and Odd Covers
Year Of Release: 2010
Label: Self-Released
Genre: Alternative, Country Rock
Quality: 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks+cue, log)
Total Time: 63:47
Total Size: 153 mb / 385 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
What constitutes folk music today is the subject of wide speculation. Some fans say it must have rural roots, traditional instrumentation, and be passed down from person to person. Others claim that in an age of electronic transmission, any music a person heard as part of the fabric of his or her life is part of that individual’s folk culture. For the Handsome Family, it is a bit of both -- and, as they are creative artists, something more. The band has an ancient sound rich with the ghosts of losers and lovers from centuries past and dwelling amongst us today. The primordial clangs against the contemporary whether the Handsome Family covers an olde ballade or offers a self-penned piece.
This is evident even on the song choices listed on the band’s recent compilation, Scattered: A Further Collection of Lost Demos, Orphaned Songs and Odd Covers. The sequel to Smothered and Covered features demos, outtakes, b-sides, and such performed in all their raggedy glory. This includes renditions of everything from classic rock (the Beatles’ “Eleanor Rigby”), folk rock (Bob Dylan’s “Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues"), classic country (Hank Williams’ “Lost Highway”), traditional (“What Does the Deep Sea Say”), and originals (“Snowball”, “A Plague of Humans”) that clearly derive from older folk sources. The covers offer elegant recreations as if dressed in thrift store finery. Consider “Eleanor Rigby”, an overplayed oldie here given a fine bluegrass style accompaniment with Rennie Sparks softly singing of loneliness to husband Brett’s low harmonies. Joined by the Rivet Gang, the Handsome Family makes the song fresh and haunting, the way it sounded when first released by the fab four as a single. That’s not an easy thing to do.
While the covers of classic material stand out here, particularly Brett’s deliberate reading of Leonard Cohen’s “Famous Blue Raincoat” that breathlessly captures the joy and despair of being alone, that does not mean the band lacks a sense of humor, and a black one at that. The self-penned “Beer on the Roof” makes poetry out of the urban scenery (e.g., “the clouds kissed the smokestacks”) even as the dread of sober morning beckons. Brett’s ode to life after a stay in a mental hospital (“Tranquilized”) offers depression as an alternative to drugs. And his “Telephones and Telescopes” inadvertently reveals that one can spend too much time listening to R.E.M.
And as one might expect from such a compilation, there are sui generis gems that defy easy description. The instrumental “Honcho” belongs to that soundtracks to an imaginary western genre, and in this one, the good guy gets to go on another day. However, in the spooky Harlan Howard cover “Blizzard”, the good guy dies in the snowstorm because he won’t desert his horse. The spoken word narrative section’s instrumentation is as desolate as the person telling the story, in contrast to the band’s noisefest “Little Buddha”, where the electric guitars duel steel on steel drumming for who can be louder while the singer warbles about “nuclear war” and “TV screens”. Punk rock or old time country -- the Handsome Family shows how the different genres are connected at the root. In the age of mechanical reproduction, we hear it all as new and hear all as part of everything else.
What sounds old, is for all intents and purposes old. Which is why the Handsome Family can take a song such as “Eleanor Rigby” and show how the Beatles’ tune is now part of our folk tradition, passed from generation to generation through phonographs, CDs, MP3s, whatever. The band knows we are all just lonely people. We are where we came from.
This is evident even on the song choices listed on the band’s recent compilation, Scattered: A Further Collection of Lost Demos, Orphaned Songs and Odd Covers. The sequel to Smothered and Covered features demos, outtakes, b-sides, and such performed in all their raggedy glory. This includes renditions of everything from classic rock (the Beatles’ “Eleanor Rigby”), folk rock (Bob Dylan’s “Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues"), classic country (Hank Williams’ “Lost Highway”), traditional (“What Does the Deep Sea Say”), and originals (“Snowball”, “A Plague of Humans”) that clearly derive from older folk sources. The covers offer elegant recreations as if dressed in thrift store finery. Consider “Eleanor Rigby”, an overplayed oldie here given a fine bluegrass style accompaniment with Rennie Sparks softly singing of loneliness to husband Brett’s low harmonies. Joined by the Rivet Gang, the Handsome Family makes the song fresh and haunting, the way it sounded when first released by the fab four as a single. That’s not an easy thing to do.
While the covers of classic material stand out here, particularly Brett’s deliberate reading of Leonard Cohen’s “Famous Blue Raincoat” that breathlessly captures the joy and despair of being alone, that does not mean the band lacks a sense of humor, and a black one at that. The self-penned “Beer on the Roof” makes poetry out of the urban scenery (e.g., “the clouds kissed the smokestacks”) even as the dread of sober morning beckons. Brett’s ode to life after a stay in a mental hospital (“Tranquilized”) offers depression as an alternative to drugs. And his “Telephones and Telescopes” inadvertently reveals that one can spend too much time listening to R.E.M.
And as one might expect from such a compilation, there are sui generis gems that defy easy description. The instrumental “Honcho” belongs to that soundtracks to an imaginary western genre, and in this one, the good guy gets to go on another day. However, in the spooky Harlan Howard cover “Blizzard”, the good guy dies in the snowstorm because he won’t desert his horse. The spoken word narrative section’s instrumentation is as desolate as the person telling the story, in contrast to the band’s noisefest “Little Buddha”, where the electric guitars duel steel on steel drumming for who can be louder while the singer warbles about “nuclear war” and “TV screens”. Punk rock or old time country -- the Handsome Family shows how the different genres are connected at the root. In the age of mechanical reproduction, we hear it all as new and hear all as part of everything else.
What sounds old, is for all intents and purposes old. Which is why the Handsome Family can take a song such as “Eleanor Rigby” and show how the Beatles’ tune is now part of our folk tradition, passed from generation to generation through phonographs, CDs, MP3s, whatever. The band knows we are all just lonely people. We are where we came from.
:: TRACKLIST ::
1 –The Handsome Family - The Lost Soul
2 –The Handsome Family - When It Rains
3 –The Handsome Family - Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues
4 –The Handsome Family - Snowball
5 –The Handsome Family - Ain't No Grave
6 –The Handsome Family - Little Buddy
7 –The Handsome Family With The Rivet Gang - Eleanor Rigby
8 –The Handsome Family - A Plague Of Humans
9 –The Handsome Family - Famous Blue Raincoat
10 –The Handsome Family - Drinking Beer On The Roof
11 –The Handsome Family - Telephones And Telescopes
12 –The Handsome Family, Selsun Blues - Lost Highway
13 –The Handsome Family - Honcho
14 –The Handsome Family - The Blizzard
15 –The Handsome Family - What Does The Deep Sea Say?
16 –The Handsome Family - Tranqualized
17 –The Handsome Family - June Bugs (Alternate Mix)
18 –The Handsome Family - One Way Up (4-Track Demo)
19 –The Handsome Family - Claire Said (Rehearsal Tape)
Self-released CD in a middlemounted six-panel black tray Digipak, only available at their concerts and from their website.
Track 1: Originally recorded for the Bloodshot Records' 2005 compilation, For A Decade Of Sin.
Track 2: Supposed to be on Twilight.
Track 3: Recorded this for the 2005 compilation, Highway 61 Revisited Revisited released by Uncut Magazine.
Track 4: Originally released on Bloodshot's 2002 children's record, The Bottle Let Me Down.
Track 6: Written 1993. Taken from a cassette tape.
Track 7: Recorded for Revolver Reloaded, a 2006 compilation released by Mojo.
Track 8: Written for David Coulter's "Plague Songs" that took place at London's Barbican Centre in 2007.
Track 10: An alternative take of "The Red Leaf Forest", a digital-only bonus track released with Honey Moon.
Track 11: Originally released as a 7" single by Speed Kills in 1992. Recorded at Kingsize Studio.
Track 12: Recorded for a 2002 German compilation of Hank Williams songs.
Track 13: Recorded on 4-track.
Track 16: 1996.
Track 17: Final version released on Honey Moon.
Track 18: Early live recording made probably around 1992. Included on a cassette tape.