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SON VOLT, Sunday Times, November 02, 1997 There is a new wave of young American "alternative country" bands daring to re-evaluate their national music heritage. Nashville pedal steel guitars now sit easily in the kind of independently minded acts that would once have considered them heresy. They draw in fans old enough to remember country rock's first wave of the Byrds and the Flying Burrito Brothers in the 1960s, and college kids for whom the music's homespun leanings chime with a diginity absent from stadium grunge rock. It was 30-year-old Missouri musician Jay Farrar's first group, Uncle Tupelo, that kick-started this trend. The magazine No Depression, alt country's inky bimonthly bible, takes its name from Uncle Tupelo's 1990 debut album. Now every American label is cultivating at least one alt country act beside its Identikit female folk-rock sirens and third-generation Nirvana copies. Wagon, Whiskeytown, Mr Henry, Richmond Fontaine, the Gourds and the Backsliders are among the Flying Burrito Brothers-inflected postpunks coming to a decent record shop near you soon; and Farrar's new band, Son Volt, start their first UK tour on Wednesday. So how does it feel to be a figurehead, Jay Farrar? "Some people might try to put us in that position," he says, "but I don't see it." To describe Farrar as an unforthcoming man would be an understatement. There are more communicative monks. But his abstracted earnestness at least reflects his music, rather than seeming like the usual rock'n'roll dimwit's affectation of depth. When Uncle Tupelo split after 1993's Anodyne LP, sour-faced Farrar formed Son Volt; his Teletubby-lookalike partner Jeff Tweedy rechristened the remainder of the band Wilco, and went in search of sunnier musical climes. While Son Volt have spent two albums refining the Tupelo template of dark, insurgent, subtly melodic electro-acoustic country without troubling the music press too much, Wilco's sophomore effort, the Being There double album - a sprawling, professionally executed pastiche of three decades of classic Americana - is many a thirtysomething rock critic's record of 1997. Wilco closed their world tour at the Shepherd's Bush Empire in April, ungraciously baiting the limeys while a roadie sang Black Sabbath songs to bewildered Mojo readers, and were last seen parachuting out of a plane in the video for the Outtasite single. Tweedy has even been quoted in No Depression as saying Uncle Tupelo's "sombre" approach was "bulls***. Music is entertainment," he affirmed. But
Farrar, a genuine southern gentleman to the last, won't be drawn
on his old bandmate's newly discovered sense of rock theatre. "I
just concentrate on the task in hand," he offers. Indeed, if
you choose to buy into Farrar's shrug-shouldered, noncommital stance,
his whole Introducing
songs by the Depression-era vocal troupe the Carter Family and 1950s
gospel-bluegrass group the Louvin Brothers into Uncle Tupelo's early
1980s US-college rock-derived catalogue seemed like the actions
of a wilful maverick bent on fusing new musical Farrar,
then, the country-rock resurgence's accidental messiah, more Graham
Chapman's Brian than Robert Powell's Jesus, is cursed with humility
and unable to second-guess what is expected from him. Indeed, when
Uncle Tupelo first played in Britain, off the back of their down-home,
acoustic, bluegrass-influenced 1992 album, the simply titled March
16-20 1992, they disappointed fans with an unrepresentative set
of their most obvious electric power-thrash Whatever
the truth of the story, Farrar says that, live, Son Volt accurately
sum up the band's breadth of different sounds. Next week's shows
should embrace the four-piece's delicate balancing act of direct,
irresistible, melodic country rock and fiddle-enhanced tear-jerkers,
all capped by Farrar's heaven-sent gift of a voice, an impossibly
authoritative, whisky-soaked burr utterly unlike any other. And
though he has trouble explaining himself in person, Farrar Trace
opened with Windfall, something of a stylistic declaration of intent,
picturing a lonesome driver "Switching it over to AM, searching
for a truer sound/Can't recall the call letters, steel Like
the aimless drifters he writes of, surrendering to the mercy of
circumstance and the elements, Farrar seems to see Son Volt's success
as something beyond his influence. Was he happy with Trace? "It
did well enough for us to continue touring," he reflects, as
if optimism |
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