Seattle band Red Jacket Mine is
comprised of singer/songwriter Lincoln Barr, guitar/pedal steel whiz Patrick
Porter (who also fronts local rockers Explone, and has played in a host of
Seattle bands, including Crystal Radio and the Bourbonites), bassist Ryan
Chapman, and drummer Andy Salzman -- has spent the last four years honing its
craft on stages throughout the Northwest, and it shows.
Cut live to two-inch tape with minimal overdubs at Seattle's
Soundhouse Recording with producer/contributor Ken Stringfellow (The Posies/Big
Star/The Disciplines), Lovers Lookout is a work entirely more immediate and
accessible than its predecessor. Touching on Hi Records soul ("Such an Easy
Thing"), bracing guitar rock ("Childish Things"), snotty bash
& pop ("The Pose"), and smoky balladry ("Fascinated"),
the album finds Hello, Old Cloud's often delicate, restrained tenor supplanted
by a newfound passion and confidence.
“We set up in the studio just like we play live,” Barr says.
“Since making the first album, we’d become a band, and I wanted to capture that
without any kid-in-a-candy-store studio artifice getting in the way.”
On their increasingly-rare decision to record to tape, Barr
says, “It’s certainly getting to be prohibitively expensive. We could only
afford four reels — just enough for an album, really. I kind of felt like, if
we wanted to make a record on tape, this could be our last chance. So we went
for it, and it was absolutely the right decision. It simplified the process in
the best possible way. ‘Is this the take? Because we can only keep one.’ It
either is or isn’t. If it feels good, let’s go with it. If not, let’s play it
again.”
As on Hello, Old Cloud, Eyvind Kang contributes several
characteristically-brilliant string arrangements, but this time around, Kang's
contributions favor in-the-moment spontaneity over graceful composure. Nowhere
is this more evident than on the hazy esoterica of "Apricot Moon,"
where Kang's viola wrestles fellow guest Ian Moore's angular, Tom
Verlaine-meets-Hubert Sumlin guitar for dominance, consummating in a glorious
cacophony of wood and wire. Moore also lends his signature keening falsetto to
this track, providing Lovers Lookout with one of its most haunting moments.
With a knockout record in the can and an incendiary live
show to back it up, Red Jacket Mine appear destined for the breakthrough their
growing number of fans have expected all along. Beyond that, there's no
dramatic story of tragedy and triumph. The fellows in Red Jacket Mine are
reasonably content, and why shouldn't they be? The story is the music. And the
music is good.
Openers Patrick Porter and Nathan Wade & The Dark Pioneers complete the Seattle line up for the first March artist residency show at the new Hard Rock Cafe Seattle on Tuesday, March 9th, 2010. Doors open at 7:30pm, show begins at 8pm.
Tickets at $5, and can be purchased online here:
http://www.ticketweb.com/t3/sale/SaleEventDetail?dispatch=loadSelectionData&eventId=1272375