Last Days of Wonder, the seventh studio album from Albuquerque,
New Mexico based The Handsome Family, is a collection
of love songs sung in airports, garbage dumps, drive-thru
windows and shark-infested waters.
It celebrates the little miraculous moments of beauty
found in everyday life: a golf course shining in the
rain, hanging lights bouncing in the breeze, pigeons
singing from billboards, trees blooming in squares of
dirt.
The songs linger on those moments when we're pulled
from the ordinary to feel awed by mystery, bewildered
by beauty, terrified by the vast unknowable around us
(whether we wander through shady groves or crowded parking
lots).
Brett Sparks, who writes the music, draws from medieval
melody, country-politan string arrangements, tin-pan
alley crooners, and dusty hillbilly records to weave
together the fabric of this record while Rennie Sparks,
who writes the lyrics, makes magical realism from polar
adventure stories, turn-of-the-century electricity wars,
pagan hunting songs and her own time spent (like most
people) riding up elevators, staring out hotel room
windows, and driving interstate highways.
The inspiration for the words in these songs (and especially
the song 'Tesla's Hotel Room') comes from Rennie's belief
that not only does our present world feel like the last
days of wonder, but that human life has always felt
just this way: full of a sense of impending doom and
inevitable self-destruction, but simultaneously steeped
in the sacred, the infinite, the impenetrable, the ever-wondrous.
She was inspired by Nikola Tesla's life because he,
also, found himself in a world where science sought
to remove all mystery from the world.
Tesla found ways for scientific, rational thought to
co-exist with dreams of the numinous. He felt drawn
to invent machines to make our lives better (wireless
communications, remote control), but also to build a
death ray capable of shattering the planet to pieces.
He wondered if X-ray beams and laser beams were the
fingertips of God. His ambivalence towards the world
led him to isolate himself in his laboratory, unable
to shake hands with another human being or eat anything
besides Saltines. One day he opened his window and befriended
the many pigeons on the rooftop.
Rennie, too, has found that a connection to nature
brings solace when the terrors of modern human life
become overwhelming and her lyrics reflect this unspoken
but universal feeling about the world today.
Brett's musical compositions for the new record and
his recording process were hybrids of the old and the
new; the real and the fake; the analog and the digital.
He drew inspiration from reading The Complete Beatles
Recording Sessions, which led to many experiments, like
recording a kick drum using an old woofer (reverse-wired
to a mic cable) as a deep bass mic.
He went trolling through hundreds of collected banks
of samples on his hard drives, where he found a scratchy
old Mellotron tape loop that inspired an entire song's
composition ('These Golden Jewels').
Last Days of Wonder is full of such anomalies: analog
compressors, vintage instruments and condenser mics,
all drawn into the digital world of computer recording.
For 'Beautiful William' he mixed a fake glass harmonica
synth patch with a recording of real bowed crystal wine
glasses (only breaking one glass in the process).
For the new CD he also perfected the technique of recording
an entire drum kit 'machine style' - one drum at a time
in real time then editing them all together on the computer.
The virtual band created for this record got even weirder
when pedal steel parts were e-mailed in from Chicago
(Stephen Dorocke) and the musical saw part was e-mailed
in from London (David Coulter).
This new Handsome Family record travels from swamps
and caves to laboratories and bowling alleys, always
celebrating the mystery and madness in love. The songs
explain who's hanging shoes on telephone wires, why
automatic sinks in airports sometimes don't see your
hands, and why The Handsome Family refuses to go to
Heaven unless flies can come too.
Also, a tender tale of Tesla's last days: his love
for wounded pigeons and his ability to explode light
bulbs with his mind. Rennie is eaten by a wild boar.
Brett threatens to pull the stars down from the sky.
It's a record of love songs in the true Romantic sense
(a heightened sense of nature, emotion, imagination
and a rebellion against social convention).
Special guests on the record include Stephen Dorocke
on pedal steel (Freakwater / Jesse Sykes) as well as
saw-player David Coulter (Test Dept / The Pogues / Tom
Waits).
The entire album was recorded over a year's time in
the converted garage studio at the back of the Sparks'
Albuquerque house. Brett recorded it all on a Mac and
a whole mess of wires, microphones and little metal
boxes. Alongside the usual guitar, bass and drums you
will hear mellotrons, ukulele, banjo, bowed wine glasses,
and trombone.
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