The Mountain Goats - Goths

Drowned In Sound 90

It’d be easy to open this review in a Pitchfork historian way, with broad statements about that long-suffering subculture of the goth. And sure, even the roughest sketch of what this 40-year-old fascination for death entailed – fog machines, perverse crosses, skeletal frames - would be useful for a concept album that revolves around its black-clad adherents. But any rote summary of the goth phenomenon would overlook the whole dang point of John Darnielle’s latest song cycle, easily his most lavish creation yet for indie institution The Mountain Goats. Just as last year’s Beat the Champ was less about wrestling and more about the wrestlers that never quite leave the ring, Goths doesn’t dwell on the Batcave or The Cure (although Darnielle apparently wrote a song called 'Get High and Listen To The Cure' that didn’t make the cut). Rather, we experience the surreal life of the typical goth from the eyes of adults as they reconcile their former and current lives. And what’s brilliant about that, is how easily any ageing muso could relate to the web that unfolds within.

First off, an admission: half the reason I’ve enjoyed this album so much is how well form matches function here. To begin with, Darnielle outlawed guitars in favor of the Fender Rhodes, an electric piano that really took off in the Seventies – especially with Steely Dan, the coolest cats on AM radio. Thus, rather than the spirited jangles you’ve come to know and love from the Mountain Goats, Goths glides with that super urbane, champaign-tinted swing, with those suave and fluttery sax solos that just whisper 'adult'. And I get a huge kick out of that, as someone who learned to savour Steely Dan’s sophisticated jazz structures and louche antiheroes as I matured. So for me especially, the gorgeous sax arrangements on songs like 'Paid in Cocaine' and 'The Grey King and the Silver Attunement' (yes, all the titles on Goths are GREAT) sets that wizened perspective that Darnielle hoped to impart throughout, even when the reminiscing adult isn’t always in the frame.

Oh, yes – these stories. I mean, you probably know better than me how well Darnielle can weave disparate scenes into a coherent concept, and how damn well he can breathe such vitality into those scenes, and that’s all in place here. What’s marvellous about Goths, though, is how bizarre situations – like, wait for it, the trials of the cult in 'Unicorn Tolerance' (told you) – become familiar passages of youth. As we listen to the protagonist sleep in graveyards and scale dank wells, he notes that he’s ”drawn to where I’m drawn / seldom wonder why, just follow you”. Likewise in 'The Grey King', even if you don’t “file your teeth down to fine points”, you’ve surely either known, seen, or been one of those guys that try to fit back into the uniforms of their glory days.

Mind, the best moments could arguably be the most mundane ones. I can’t entirely explain, for instance, why the ultra-casual 'We Do It Different On The West Coast' works so well – perhaps because, at some level, intensely involved (and green) musos like me would love to still be that guy that keeps tabs on the scene 20 years from now. And then there’s the genius of 'Wear Black', and the casual gospel of how to signify yr undying commitment to the cause in any situation (”wear black back to the car”); when the key change cranks the uplift factor halfway in, you could either laugh or bow your head in awe.

I could go on – about the beauty of how the torch is passed to a new generation across the
globe in the hushed 'For The Portugese Goth Metal Bands', or how a jaded veteran laments about the industry and contemplates folding in on 'Shelved' (which, ironically, contains the most 'goth' passage in the whole album, the bass solo, perhaps a bittersweet reminder of the ecstasies he’d have to leave behind). But for me, the moment that gets me every time – the one that might warm the heart of even the most dedicated goth-hater, and best conveys what the album’s really about – is when the radio DJ in 'Paid in Cocaine' pulls out a master tape of his old band. “All four of us / so fresh and alive”, he says, a stark contrast to their corpse-like personas. It’s that warm pulse, that gushing camaraderie, that renders Goths as more than a clever conceit; no, this album is a love letter, written in elegant cursive (and blood, obvs), for anyone and everyone that holds the underground to their heart.

![104751](http://dis.resized.images.s3.amazonaws.com/540x310/104751.jpeg)

Wed May 17 08:09:26 GMT 2017

Pitchfork 80

Save for perhaps lumberjacks, there is no scene more everlasting than goths. The candles and coffins, the bats and spiders, the milky-white legs under jet black jeans that fill up the corners of goth culture are all just the artifacts for its everlasting creed: death is real, and it waits for us all. The true goth compass points toward the final darkness and woe unto those who must lease their time here in the light, squeezing cantaloupe at the grocery store and forgetting to call the guy about the broken sump pump. Goths, the latest from the Mountain Goats, is about the journey between life in the dark and death in the light, and ultimately trying to find a home somewhere between.

That elusive, literary home for John Darnielle—the lead singer and songwriter of the Mountain Goats for 26 years—has been a theme in his writing lately. Whether on his 2015 album Beat the Champ or in his 2017 novel Universal Harvester, Darnielle writes about the larger, decades-long journeys that play out in the rural American diaspora. Though setting these stories in bloody wrestling rings in South Texas or spliced into unsettling VHS tapes at a local video store in Iowa, at the center of both is a question: Where can we go when our youth, our vocation, or our family has left us? The same question applies here to Goths, a question buried underneath its fables about a singer in a California goth band in the ’80s.

At this point in his career, Darnielle is in his own private league of songwriting. His verse is effortless, his detail impeccable, and the joy with which he animates these weary souls languishing in Long Beach rock clubs make every word just glow. Goths is Darnielle’s most evocative work since the occultist All Eternals Deck and even though it remains loosely conceptual like Beat the Champ, it’s all tethered to this palpable, too-casual melancholy, the kind that comes with telling a cautionary tale one too many times.

This type of emotion was always present in the Mountain Goats of the ’90s and early ’00s, when it was just tape hiss, a guitar, and Darnielle, who then had nothing to more to give than his swollen heart. Since the band adopted their hi-fi lineup of bassist Peter Hughes and drummer Jon Wurster—and peppered songs with Memphis-soul horn arrangements and the occasional men’s chorus—it’s been a bit harder to sink your teeth into a Mountain Goats song, and vice versa. But for the first time in Mountain Goats’ history, there’s no guitar on the album, replaced instead by Darnielle on piano or a warm Fender Rhodes. This slight tweak in tone makes the band more like the silk paper on which Darnielle writes, illuminating the lyrics and making the story and verse more accessible. Goths sounds nothing like goth rock, but maybe, Darnielle seems to suggest, every goth rocker is destined to write their own bookish, soft-rock opus about nights doing cocaine while listening to Bauhaus.

For indeed, the life of a goth all starts out great. After a jaunty, baroque tune about the lead singer of Sisters of Mercy packing it in and moving back to his punk roots in Leeds, the lens shifts to the West Coast of America, trying to understand how goth rock works in California thousands of miles away from Batcave, the London nightclub at the center of the UK scene. Darnielle takes us to the Los Angeles suburb of West Covina where, on “Stench of the Unburied,” a young vamp cruises the highways in a Pontiac Grand Am, drunk and alive, seeing visions of his car going up in flames, all while listening to KROQ play Siouxsie and the Banshees. The prime years of the young goth culminate with “Wear Black,” a gorgeous hymn for the timeless language of black, a sigil of goths worldwide. No matter what happens, Darnielle sings, one must wear black in the light, in the dark, in the present tense, or in my absence.

On the back half of the album, the fast life of a goth becomes untenable. Our singer is older now, playing shows to no one on the Sunset Strip, ostracized and broken, recalling how they were once paid in cocaine (“Paid in Cocaine”) and now refusing to open for Trent Reznor (“Shelved”). Darnielle adds more and more space to the songs, slows down his delivery as if it is almost too difficult to admit that “the ride’s over.” By the quiet end, he’s almost thankful for his grim middle-aged fate, “hauling these songs to the light from the mouth of the grave” playing “really big festivals every other summer in Brazil” (“For the Portuguese Goth Metal Bands”). What was once a consuming identity has now calcified into a useless signifier, the passion for the music of the Cure, March Violets, and Red Lorry Yellow Lorry all displaced into trying to pay down the interest on the mortgage. “Nobody wants to hear the 12-bar blues/From a guy in platform shoes” Darnielle sings, hapless and dejected.

This hollow feeling of Goths lingers. Either you fear age dulling the passions of your youth, or you are living it right now. It’s like when you bury a loved one when death is no longer a pose, but an endless stream of paperwork and phone calls and garbage bags full of old clothes. This ultimate mundanity is detailed on the most haunting song on the album, “Abandoned Flesh,” an ode to the “suffocated splendor of the once and future goth band” Gene Loves Jezebel. Darnielle blithely tells the history of the unheralded band from their Wikipedia page. A band’s whole career, the theater of death and the comfort it created has a half-life in the real world, reduced to an anecdote, or quite literally, to an epilogue on a dainty Mountain Goats album about goth. This final turn by Darnielle is what makes him a songwriter nonpareil: macabre humor, tales that weave in and out of fiction, and the smile he cracks after leaving a gaping hole in your heart. Beware, ye goths, life waits for us all, too.

Mon May 22 05:00:00 GMT 2017

The Guardian 80

(Merge)

The New Yorker once called the Mountain Goats’ frontman John Darnielle “America’s best non-hip-hop lyricist”. Here, the 50-year-old sometime novelist is in masterly form, reappraising his teenage goth years. The hints of Nick Cave’s Bad Seeds in opener Rain in Soho aside, piano, woozy sax and sumptuous Prefab Sprout AOR combine with lyrics about Portuguese goth metal, an unlikely juxtaposition that emphasises the songs’ mix of wry insight and black humour. Darnielle is at his most beautifully evocative (“Outside it’s 92 degrees and KROQ plays Siouxsie and the Banshees … ”) in Stench of the Unburied. There are plenty of chuckles (“Red Lorry Yellow Lorry were on Cherry Red I think / They’ve been playing clubs since 1981”), but the New Order-ish Shelved is as great as anything Darnielle has written. At heart, there’s touching affection for forgotten bands such as Gene Loves Jezebel, those who cling on to their dreams, and an emotional wallop in how the supposed follies of our youth can bring lifelong riches.

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Thu May 18 20:15:36 GMT 2017