The
music has panoramic richness. In the second part of the first chapter,
the instrumental piece 'The Good, the Bad, and the Couillon,’
the trumpet, sounding like more than one horn, augments a galloping
beat, and the music has a chameleon intricacy, Spanish being one
of its accents, with a lot of drama, drive, and energy. The music
sounds too complex to be improvised (I imagine the musicians must
be reading music sheets to keep up).
by
Daniel Garrett
Vagabond
Swing’s Soundtrack to an Untimely Death is beautiful,
complex, crazy music, elegant and rough, serious and joking, a blend
of jazz, rock, and other forms of music (I hear something Latinate:
Spanish, Italian); and the album seems to have been inspired, at
least partly, by a short invented story-noted in brief chapters
on the album’s illustrated inside jacket-of a love found,
lost, and murdered, ending in a tribute to Django Reinhardt. I doubt
that Vagabond Swing has much competition, as this is a very eccentric
music. The members of Vagabond Swing are Jessie Duplechain, Jon
Stone, Hayden Talley, Roy Durand, Josh Leblanc, and someone named
Weebor; and Soundtrack to an Untimely Death is a great-imaginative,
passionate, unique-calling card.
I am
not sure how closely music ever follows a story, but listening one
can pick up in the lyrics and the shifting mood of the music different
aspects of the story told on Soundtrack to an Untimely Death.
In the first part-'Once Upon a Heist’-of "Chapter 1,"
villainous horsemen attempt robbing a train; and the album begins
with a beat with a bit of a thrash, a train whistle, a horn, and
a howling voice. The beat that takes over is quick and comic, and
a self-dramatizing voice offers robbery instructions and threats
(the voice brings to mind Tom Waits and Nick Cave; a voice with
a raw punk grain). The music has panoramic richness. In the second
part of the first chapter, the instrumental piece 'The Good, the
Bad, and the Couillon,’ the trumpet, sounding like more than
one horn, augments a galloping beat, and the music has a chameleon
intricacy, Spanish being one of its accents, with a lot of drama,
drive, and energy. The music sounds too complex to be improvised
(I imagine the musicians must be reading music sheets to keep up).
The
musical beginning of "Chapter 2" sounds intentionally
pedestrian, as when convention or duty dictates behavior (it sounds
like a bar scene, with one person giving in to the desire of another).
A voice says, "Put your hand on my knee" and "I’ll
be the man that you want me to be." Then, there is recourse
to a private space, and an erotic act takes place, followed by brassy
music, in a movement or song called 'Drop Trou.’ How much
does that have to do with the written story, in which a young woman,
Daisy, is torn between two lovers, one a vagabond horseman-thief,
and the other a farmer, whom she will marry and rear a son with,
in the text of "Chapter 2"? Daisy’s affection
or attraction to the vagabond lasts, despite her family responsibilities.
For the second musical movement-'Kampana/Merry Go Wrong’-of
"Chapter 2," there is clapping and a kind of circle-group
beat that becomes heavy and shuffling, a trumpet, and, before long,
an element of funk, a bit of psychedelia, then a rhythm that jazz
patrons would recognize, and a flutter of notes before a tumult
that ends in unified voices.
In
"Chapter 3" ('The Great Trick’), the thieving horsemen
find Daisy, and her husband kills most of them, but not Daisy’s
former flame; and the killing leaves Daisy unhappy in "Chapter
4" ('Daisy and the Vagabond’). Killing someone is, of
course, the ultimate repudiation; a rejection of a person and of
that person’s relation to oneself and the world: thought made
(dead) flesh. In 'The Great Trick,’ is a large drum sound-it
has a magnified echo-reminding me of 1970s rock, and there are slurred
words, sounding drunken, a light interlude, then a bullet-like rhythm.
A woman whispers something, and a man admits, "I hear what
I want to hear." There is a little gypsy music, and weird nature
sounds. The next movement ('Daisy and the Vagabond’) begins
with what sounds like a contented voice (the farmer’s?) and
a marching band, but then, "one day in my garden, I saw a sight
not to see," the kind of a man seen in dreams (a woman’s
desire; a rival male’s fear). There is an air of dramatic
decision, of momentum.
There
is more murder in the text of "Chapter 5" ('Soundtrack
to an Untimely Death’) when the farmer realizes Daisy is involved
with the vagabond horseman. Musically, there are little mandolin
trills, a sad and soaring (possibly elegiac) trumpet, a dying flutter
of notes, and a big drum sound, before a roaming man-now, the farmer-speaks
of "my life spent running from my crime," the murder of
wife and lover, after beginning to believe his son is not his but
that of the vagabond. The music rumbles with renewed life, and the
words suggest a return home, ending with a crowing bird and a ringing
bell.
Although
the previous music advanced the story to exile in the city
and a return home, the text for "Chapter 6" notes that
the father leaves his field for the city, and years later returns
to the now grown son he had helped to rear, and there is-as with
many fathers and sons in legend and myth-a bloody meeting between
the two. The album Soundtrack to an Untimely Death by Vagabond
Swing, a band of multi-talented individuals, ends with a tribute
to Django Reinhardt; a conclusion of trumpet, harmonic voices, and
disparate rhythms-light, sultry, jazzy, eastern. Indeed, keyboardist
Weebor and guitarist Jessie Duplechain, violinist Jon Stone, upright
bassist Hayden Talley, drummer Roy Durand, and trumpeter Josh Leblanc-with
Duplechain, Stone, Durand, Leblanc, and Weebor doing vocal work-and
the participation of Jamie Landry and Alex Brannon on cello, and
other friends helping with sound effects, have produced in Soundtrack
to an Untimely Death something imaginative, passionate, and
unique.
Daniel Garrett, a graduate of the New School for Social Research,
and the principal organizer of the Cultural Politics Discussion
Group at Poets House, is a writer whose work has appeared in The
African, All About Jazz, American Book Review, Art & Antiques,
The Audubon Activist, Black Film Review, Changing Men, Cinetext,
Contact II, Film International, The Humanist, Hyphen, Illuminations,
Muse Apprentice Guild, Offscreen, Option, Pop Matters, Quarterly
Black Review of Books, Rain Taxi, Red River Review, Review of Contemporary
Fiction, Wax Poetics, and World Literature Today.
Garrett originated two internet logs: one focused on culture and
social issues, "City and Country, Boy and Man," and one
focused on books, "The Garrett Reader." He has been writing
a novel, A Stranger on Earth. BACK TO TOP
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