Showing posts with label Death Ballad Love Tellers Tour. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Death Ballad Love Tellers Tour. Show all posts

Monday, 16 April 2012

It's A Wonderful Life - Sparklehorse with Troy "Bubba" Cook - April 16, 2012

Troy "Big Bubba" Cook is a big Sparklehorse fan.  Each night of our recent Death Ballad Love Teller's Tour (me, Troy, and Ben Sures in the round) we performed the song It's A Wonderful Life together.  In Vancouver, Troy picked up the entire Sparklehorse catalogue on reissued vinyl from Red Cat Records.  Mark Linkous, the creative force behind Sparklehorse, died tragically, and Bubba feels that by playing his music, he contributes to keep the music alive and vital.  It seemed right to do the song this week, so Sunday night, tour over, we headed down to the basement and laid it down.









Here we are performing the song



Here's the Sparklehorse video for It's a Wonderful Life.....directed by Guy Maddin




It's A Wonderful Life - Mark Linkous / Sparklehorse

I am the only one
the can ride that horse
th'yonder

I'm full of bees
who died at sea

it's a wonderful life
it's a wonderful life

I wore a rooster's blood
when it flew
like doves
I'm a bog 
of poisoned frogs

it's a wonderful life
it's a wonderful life

I'm the dog that ate
your birthday cake


it's a wonderful life
it's a wonderful life
it's a wonderful life


Sparklehorse Biography

Although its name suggests the presence of a full band, Sparklehorse was essentially the work of singer/songwriter Mark Linkous, an alumnus of the mid-'80s indie band the Dancing Hoods. A tenure in the Johnson Family (later known as Salt Chuck Mary) followed, as did stints sweeping chimneys and painting houses. He began working as Sparklehorse in 1995, honing his spooky, lo-fi roots pop in the studio located on his farm in Bremo Bluff, VA. After a demo made its way to the offices of Capitol Records, Linkous signed to the label and issued Sparklehorse's acclaimed debut, Vivadixiesubmarinetransmissionplot, scoring an alternative radio hit with the single "Someday I Will Treat You Good."
In early 1996, after a Sparklehorse concert in London, Linkous nearly died when he passed out after mixing Valium with prescription antidepressants. He spent 14 hours unconscious on his hotel's bathroom floor, his legs pinned under the rest of his body, and the prolonged loss of blood circulation nearly left him crippled. Many months and countless surgeries later, he was quite literally back on his feet, and his recovery provided inspiration for 1998's Good Morning Spider. Linkous then collaborated with PJ Harvey and the Cardigans' Nina Persson on 2001's radiant It's a Wonderful Life. In between that album and 2006's Dreamt for Light Years in the Belly of a Mountain (which featured contributions from Tom Waits and Danger Mouse), Linkous contributed songs to the soundtrack of the film #Laurel Canyon and produced Daniel Johnston's 2003 album, Fear Yourself.
The next Sparklehorse project was truly an ambitious one: a multimedia sound and art gallery done in conjunction with Danger Mouse and filmmaker David Lynch called Dark Night of the Soul. The project featured several singers, including James Mercer, Gruff Rhys, Jason Lytle, Julian Casablancas, Frank Black, Iggy Pop, Nina Persson, Suzanne Vega, Vic Chesnutt, Scott Spillane, and David Lynch, whose photographs made up the 100-page accompanying book. Although slated to appear on the Capitol label in 2009, Dark Night of the Soul ended up dry docked by a legal dispute between EMI and Danger Mouse (most likely stemming from the producer's brilliant -- but decidedly unlicensed -- Jay-Z/Beatles 2004 mash-up The Grey Album, which creatively combined the White Album with The Black Album and jump-started his career). Dark Night of the Soul was left marooned as an adjunct hostage in a complicated legal entanglement. Copies leaked out in different configurations, but it became apparent that Dark Night of the Soul's legitimate release was in serious jeopardy. Cutting his losses, Linkous instead turned his attention to a collaborative project with laptop artist Christian Fennesz. The two had previously recorded music together in 2007, and excerpts from those sessions were packaged together, forming the 2009 release In the Fishtank.
As of early 2010, Linkous had moved to Hayesville, NC, and was reportedly nearing completion of a new Sparklehorse album. On March 6 of that year he was visiting friends in Knoxville, TN, when he committed suicide at age 47 by shooting himself in the chest with a rifle. Condolences poured in from a number of major artists in the music world, including Patti Smith, Steve Albini, and Steven Drozd of the Flaming Lips, a group with whom Linkous had collaborated on Discovered Covered, a Daniel Johnston tribute album. An official release of Dark Night of the Soul arrived that July.
~ Jason Ankeny & Steve Leggett, Rovi


Monday, 9 April 2012

The Decline of Mankind - New Song, Live from the Ptarmagin Inn with Bubba Cook


Out on tour this week - The Death Ballad Love Tellers Tour, that is - with Ben Sures http://www.bensures.com/    and Troy “Bubba” Cook www.bigbubbacook.com    Tour or not, the blog must soldier on.  Sunday night we stopped in Banff, and while Ben - Little Charlie Trouble that is – was out laying down the blues with Harpdog Brown at Wild Bill’s, Troy and I set up in our room at The Ptarmigan Inn,  consumed only the most sensible amounts of  Wild Turkey, learned this new song I penned a couple of weeks ago, and laid it down.  What’s this song about?  Why don’t you write me and tell me....or ask me.  We’ll have a conversation about it.


Here we are performing the song, little audio crap going on, but hey this is a field recording, don't you know.







The Decline of Mankind

In a dream I walk the streets
of a city that always sleeps
Buildings tumble from the sky
 and flames shoot from my feet
I got a bluebird on my shoulder
lucky rabbit on my head
the bluebird is of Chinese descent
and the rabbit has long been dead
Night falls, crawls to the river
Day softly breaks
and this crazy, lazy city never ever wakes

The pharmacists insist
that sleeping pills will cure my ills
but don’t they know about the predator, the reaper
and the night time creeper
and robots who patrol the sky
with eyes of fire
and don’t they know that when I sleep
the trees whisper and conspire
This city where night is abundant
where arriving is redundant
Because when you get here, you’re already there
and when you get there, you’re already here.

Crumbled on the couch
with a bottle of wine
I fastidiously monitor
the decline of mankind
And I’m the kind of man
who tried to be good
And if I have failed
I hope that’s understood
In my backyard, I dug up a bone
I use it now to touch my phone
The birds, the trees, the digital feed
I never knew life could be so good to me

And well, what is this Death Ballad Love Teller's Tour all about you may ask.  This is what the press is saying....

Listen, this ain't three sensitive dudes with acoustic guitars. From Ben Sures beautifully crafted, insanely clever songs to Bubba Cook's bizarre tales of zombiesin the snow, midgets, aliens, and Richard Speck to David P. Smith's raw, literate, accordion driven reconstruction of country and blues, you will not be bored. You will not have a moment to check your fucking phone for texts or tweet some bullshit to some loser who isn't there taking in this awesome show.

I am willing to personally guarantee that you will find this show highly entertaining.  Following is a link to the Victoria Facebook Event page.  Tonight we're in Lethbridge at The NAAG, Tuesday the 10th a house show in Fernie, Wednesday the 11th the Penticton Art Gallery in Penticton, Thursday the 12th at Chapel Arts in Vancouver, Saturday the 14th in Victoria at Discovery Coffee James Bay, and Sunday the 15th at Arbutus Music in Nanaimo.