IF MY HEART WERE A HOUSE YOU’D BE FROM A BROKEN HOME BY NOW: The Mountain Goats, redux. I’ll catch up with myself in the next post. (Really!)


All Hail West Texas
: Yes, I know I already talked about this disc. I have a lot of feelings, okay?

This is an album about the American experience as, above all else, transience. Post-office boxes in towns we don’t live in anymore. I wonder how much this contributes to our obsession with marriage–cf. Andrew Cherlin on European obsession with birthrates rather than marriage, for example. Home is anywhere you hang your head. Home is anywhere you hang my effigy.

The standard, effective guitar chords often serve in place of rhyme–a way of making simplicity seem more than sincerism. The chords make the songs rhyme in your heart, if you’re an American raised on the “three chords and a hope” of rock’n’roll.

“Blues in Dallas” is a 25-cent hymn on a jukebox heard from the bottom of a bottle. “Will I see you there/When that final trumpet blows?/Will I see you there/When that final trumpet blows?/If I don’t see you there/I will run/a comb through my hair/and I will wait./I will wait./I will wait.”

“And night… night comes to Texas.” (last song on this album, quiet, shaky)

Tallahassee: “Moon stuttering in the sky like film stuck in a projector”–this is the exact kind of expressionist metaphor which will always work for me. Art is more real, in our experience of life, than the raw experience itself.

“And I hand you a drink of the lovely little thing/On which our survival depends./People say friends don’t destroy one another./What do they know about friends?”

I got really into Elvis Costello because of his lyrics. I don’t know if that can happen with the MG (this is how it really happened for me) but maybe if I quote the lyrics enough you can find out for yourself.

“The House that Dripped Blood”: the whole first verse is amazing, and that killing harmonica whine at the end just makes it. Dostoevsky had a spider the size of a marriage; this song has a mosquito.

“the cellar door is an open throat”

“dig up the laughing photographs”–wow, this really is a horror movie of a song. I bet this house has laughing windows, too.

And then that IV needle of a harmonica, which carries you all the way into the vein.

I hope I’ve already made clear what I think of “No Children.” It’s like getting punched in the face by all the girlfriends you never even got the chance to disappoint. It’s what dripped into Loki’s face all those years in the cave with Sigyn. It’s like if the present and future and subjunctive tense ganged up on the past and beat it up in an alley and stole its lunch money–and then spent the money proving it right.

Oh hey, I seem to have crossed “This Year” with “Old College Try” even though they’re basically opposites. Story of my life! “Things will shortly get completely out of hand.” Wow, the contrast between the easy chords and bass and synth/organ here vs. the brutal, hope-in-a-hopeless-world lyrics really hit me in a part of my 1980s day-glo heart which will always be badly bruised. Fans of Diamanda Galas’s poppier, more fluorescent songs might like this.

“Oceanographer’s Choice”: Disorienting, bitter, catchy, poppy, self-lacerating. Are we totally sure this isn’t an ’80s MTV hit with the synth stripped out? …Seriously, not sure I could love this more unless it somehow incorporated the Reagan-era “it’s happy hour in America!” day-glo swizzle-stick aesthetic.

“And night comes to Tallahassee.” (not the last song, but ferocious and vengeful)


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