The Felice Brothers gehen mal wieder direkt ins Zentrum und aufs Ganze. „Undress“ ist der Titel des neuen Albums von Ian und James Felice und ihrer derzeitigen Mitstreiter Jesske Hume (Bass) und Will Lawrence (Drums). Wobei man das beim genaueren Hören doch deutlich weniger überdeutlich und viel mehr metaphorisch verstehen muss. Die Brüder aus Upstate New York sind immer noch ziemlich smart und machen im Titelsong aus der Aufforderung, die Klamotten abzulegen, einen schmissigen Protestsong für die amerikanische Gegenwart, in dem sie sogar den Präsidenten und seinen Vize auffordern sich doch bittezungenzuküssen. Live im Studio aufgenommen und nur sehr reduziert nachbearbeitet sind die zwölf Stücke ziemlich direkt und auf jeden Fall sehr persönlich und reflektiert ausgefallen. Drei Jahre nach ihrem letzten Album „Life In The Dark“ haben sich die Umstände einfach geändert. Die Familien wachsen, die Sorgen auch, und die politische Landschaft verändert sich erst recht. „Etliche Songs auf dem Album machen den Schritt vom Privaten ins Öffentliche“ sagt Ian Felice, „denn im Moment fällt es nicht schwer, relevante Themen zu finden. Die Sturmwolken am Horizont verdunkeln eben auch unsere Leben. Das Anspruchsvolle daran ist, auch den einfachen und direkten Weg zu finden, davon zu erzählen.“ Aber offensichtlich besteht darin für die beiden Brüder keine große Schwierigkeit. Die Geschichten, die sie erzählen, sind aufregend, melancholisch und oft auch lustig. Warum sollte man denn nicht lebensfroh untergehen? Gleichzeitig haben The Felice Brothers ihren Americana-Sound wieder einmal generalüberholt und die schönsten Harmonien und vielfältigsten Arrangements ihrer Karriere ausgepackt – und die dauert nun auch schon mehr als zehn Jahre seit den Anfängen als Straßenmusiker in den New Yorker Subway-Bahnhöfen. Die musikalische Vielfalt überwältigt auch auf der neuen Platte. Zwischen rockigen Elementen, klassischen Folk-Besetzungen, breiten Besetzungen mit Bläsern und hymnischen Songs auf Basis des gemeinsamen Harmoniegesangs entwickeln The Felice Brothers ein eng gestricktes Gewebe, das auf der Bühne und davor sicher wieder wie gewohnt für Stimmung sorgen wird, wenn sie im kommenden Februar zu uns auf Tour kommen.
Carson McHone
Years before Rolling Stone was praising Carson McHone’s rule-breaking roots music, the Austin, Texas native played weeknights in local bars like The White Horse, keeping dancers dancing and drinkers drinking. With her 21st birthday still in the distance, McHone entertained late-night crowds bearing witness to the good times and bad decisions that fill a busy bar. It was a rare, raw education. She pumped her music full of details from an early adulthood spent in the company of the heartbroken and high-toleranced.
In 2015, McHone released Goodluck Man which earned her a cover story in The Austin Chronicle as well as the support of local icons like Ray Wylie Hubbard, who said she „writes songs like her life depends on it.“ Then she hit the road, touring the U.S. (and beyond) with acts like Shakey Graves, Gary Clark, Jr., and Joe Pug. Her writing style widened and her music evolved.
“There was a time when I wanted to champion traditional country,” says McHone, “mostly because I wasn’t hearing it in what was being called ‘country’. I think a lot of roots influenced artists feel the need to defend tradition in this way. Today though, I want to do more with the form, push myself past where I understand it to be.”
Dark, driving, and evocative, 2018’s Carousel captures this period of remarkable growth, shining a light not only on McHone’s honky-tonk roots, but on her development as a modern, alt-country storyteller. It features newly written songs and updated versions of tracks that first appeared on Goodluck Man, pushing traditional sounds and themes into a modern context.
Playing an instrumental role in the process was Mike McCarthy, the now Nashville based, award-winning producer behind albums for Spoon, Patty Griffin, and Heartless Bastards. McCarthy is well versed in country music but his work is definitely not defined by the genre, which made him the perfect candidate for McHone’s new record.
Carousel is a latter-day record unconcerned with flying the flag of old-school country, inspired by diverse sources like Dylan, the Velvet Underground, and American novelist Thomas Wolfe. It wears its eclecticism proudly, with McHone singing each song in a voice that is worldly-wise and woozily gorgeous.
Carousel kicks off with „Sad,“ a song about the fraught relationship one develops with darkness, but it’s a fast-moving, high-energy song driven forward by fiddle, electric guitar, and pedal steel. This track sets the stage for an album that tackles edgy subjects without losing its bright melodies. McHone creates her own rule book, switching between tempos on „Lucky“, offsetting the acoustic guitar of „Spider Song“ with the medieval swell of a harmonium, and fills the piano ballad, „How ‚Bout It,“ with a mix of torch-song twang and late-night, jazz-club melancholia. Originally recorded back in 2015 as a deep-cutting, slow-moving waltz, “Gentle” reappears on Carousel as an anthemic tribute to a love gone cold, with McHone exploring the tension between what we know and what we feel, then honoring a relationship’s fleeting existence rather than despairing it’s demise.
The lyrics are confessional and intensely autobiographical. On “Dram Shop Gal” – one of several Goodluck Man tracks to receive a modern makeover – McHone takes a hard look at the ways in which her worldview has been shaped (for better and for worse) by her many hours in a barroom.
“I was a kid when I landed those residencies,” she says of her days at The Hole in The Wall, where she began playing Friday happy hour as a 16-year-old, and The White Horse, where she eventually took over the coveted Thursday night residency. “I wasn’t even old enough to be in those bars and they became a home to me. It’s a dark thing when a bar becomes your home.”
McHone explains that Carousel embraces where she’s come from and establishes where her musical interests are leading. “The art I’m making would be lacking if I were to stick to a specific genre. Carousel is more modern, which is where my interests lie these days, and where my writing is taking me. At the end of the day, it has to be the song that dictates.”
Growing up, McHone rode her horse bareback along the side streets of south Austin, weaving through traffic and empty parking lots to find space to „open up“. For any motorist driving past, she must’ve been a wonderfully unusual sight to behold: a messy-haired young woman riding down the street, bridging the country and the city, the past and the present, the Wild West and modern Austin.
McHone’s 2018 release builds a similar bridge. Purposeful, pointed, and poignant, Carousel is a compelling ride.