Jim White - Drill A Hole in that Substrate and Tell Me What You See (2004)
BAND/ARTIST: Jim White
- Title: Drill A Hole in that Substrate and Tell Me What You See
- Year Of Release: 2004
- Label: Luaka Bop
- Genre: Americana, Folk Rock, Singer/Songwriter
- Quality: FLAC (tracks)
- Total Time: 1:02:44
- Total Size: 392 Mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Static on the Radio (6:31)
02. Bluebird (5:30)
03. Combing My Hair In a Brand New Style (6:24)
04. That Girl From Brownsville Texas (6:23)
05. Borrowed Wings (4:34)
06. If Jesus Drove a Motor Home (4:36)
07. Objects In Motion (5:59)
08. Buzzards of Love (7:01)
09. Alabama Chrome (4:26)
10. Phone Booth In Heaven (7:09)
11. Land Called Home (4:12)
01. Static on the Radio (6:31)
02. Bluebird (5:30)
03. Combing My Hair In a Brand New Style (6:24)
04. That Girl From Brownsville Texas (6:23)
05. Borrowed Wings (4:34)
06. If Jesus Drove a Motor Home (4:36)
07. Objects In Motion (5:59)
08. Buzzards of Love (7:01)
09. Alabama Chrome (4:26)
10. Phone Booth In Heaven (7:09)
11. Land Called Home (4:12)
David Byrne's Luaka Bop label issues the third album from this unclassifiable Southern folk artist, with guest appearances from Aimee Mann, Bill Frisell, and M. Ward.
Archer Street in Chicago was once a short leg of US Rte 66, the near-mythical highway that once connected the Second City with Los Angeles, whose sprawl at the time of the highway's establishment was just an abbreviated teaser for the megalopolis the city has since spawned. Even though it only traversed a limited band of the country, Rte 66 was America's highway in a lot of respects, entering our popular song canon in the title of a standard, and bridging the open spaces of the West. There's no question that Rte 66 was an engine of entrepreneurship, as every town along its course offered something to the weary traveler-- in a sense, the road is symbolic of the golden age of local charm in this country, before Mobil bought every Charlie's Gas 'n' Go in sight and when The Thing? was as much an attraction as a Six Flags is today.
Rte 66 is, of course, just another ghost wandering through America's memory now (its old side road, US Rte 666, was recently assigned a new number by the Feds in a final act of indignity), but there are still outposts of that older, stranger, more charming America around drawing a curious trickle of people bored with canned amusement. Pensacola's Jim White strikes me as perhaps one of those people-- the man's own story fits in well with the inherent transience of American road life, and his music feeds off of the Pentecostal television programs he took in when he was young. White didn't get himself into a recording studio until his 40s, and by that time he had already spent time as a fashion model in Milan and mangled his hand in a bandsaw accident-- and that's when he wasn't surfing for a living.
White's music is singular, constantly fluctuating between various non-genres that mostly begin with post-, neo- or alt-. You can hear the white gospel of his youth dripping forward through Joe Henry's modern production, the record's lustrous sheen at once incongruous and oddly apropos for White's hushed poetics. There's an ambitious scope to this album as it traverses funky swamp folk, whispered electric ballads and humid country jazz, in the process conjuring that leftfield America of insane castle builders, toilet seat artists, Wall Drug and mystery spots as much as he captures Sunday evenings on the front porch and bluegrass concerts in the town square. And yet, the unvarnished fenceposts and unpaved roads of White's Americana are strangely modern, informed by the glow of Mercury Rev and Sparklehorse and Harry Smith's anthology in equal measure.
Archer Street in Chicago was once a short leg of US Rte 66, the near-mythical highway that once connected the Second City with Los Angeles, whose sprawl at the time of the highway's establishment was just an abbreviated teaser for the megalopolis the city has since spawned. Even though it only traversed a limited band of the country, Rte 66 was America's highway in a lot of respects, entering our popular song canon in the title of a standard, and bridging the open spaces of the West. There's no question that Rte 66 was an engine of entrepreneurship, as every town along its course offered something to the weary traveler-- in a sense, the road is symbolic of the golden age of local charm in this country, before Mobil bought every Charlie's Gas 'n' Go in sight and when The Thing? was as much an attraction as a Six Flags is today.
Rte 66 is, of course, just another ghost wandering through America's memory now (its old side road, US Rte 666, was recently assigned a new number by the Feds in a final act of indignity), but there are still outposts of that older, stranger, more charming America around drawing a curious trickle of people bored with canned amusement. Pensacola's Jim White strikes me as perhaps one of those people-- the man's own story fits in well with the inherent transience of American road life, and his music feeds off of the Pentecostal television programs he took in when he was young. White didn't get himself into a recording studio until his 40s, and by that time he had already spent time as a fashion model in Milan and mangled his hand in a bandsaw accident-- and that's when he wasn't surfing for a living.
White's music is singular, constantly fluctuating between various non-genres that mostly begin with post-, neo- or alt-. You can hear the white gospel of his youth dripping forward through Joe Henry's modern production, the record's lustrous sheen at once incongruous and oddly apropos for White's hushed poetics. There's an ambitious scope to this album as it traverses funky swamp folk, whispered electric ballads and humid country jazz, in the process conjuring that leftfield America of insane castle builders, toilet seat artists, Wall Drug and mystery spots as much as he captures Sunday evenings on the front porch and bluegrass concerts in the town square. And yet, the unvarnished fenceposts and unpaved roads of White's Americana are strangely modern, informed by the glow of Mercury Rev and Sparklehorse and Harry Smith's anthology in equal measure.
Country | Folk | Rock | FLAC / APE
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