By Don
Allred
(As first
heard by this reporter on C-90s in the mid-90s, Mountain Goats tracks were
rough-and-ready dispatches from a traveler always in the middle of something,
memories and scenes happening now, unfazed by complicated landscapes, sometimes
banging an acoustic guitar in what sounded like a park, with recruits chirping
on cue, or even coming over the mountains on a flying picnic blanket with his
latest finds, if you found yourself leaning out far enough to hear him that
way, which could happen more than once.)
Mountain Goats leader John Darnielle is a
frequently bespectacled, folk-rocking poet of song, and also a decidedly
non-ironic death metal gourmet. Confirming his rep for real talk, the sociable
Mr D. helpfully points out that if you don’t crave death metal’s “Cookie
Monster” vocals (not like his, but the ones that sound like the results of bong
hits from a vacuum cleaner), well, then you---just may not be so metal after
all.
As for Darnielle, he still savors the
moment he encountered the term “occult blood” in his nursing manual. “ ‘Occult’
just means ‘hidden’ or ‘not immediately obvious’ in medical terminology. I
thought it was the greatest thing I’d ever heard.” Becoming a death-metal-loving psychiatric nurse
may have inspired some of Darnielle’s songs, but they don’t seem exploitative.
His nameless first- person narrator, eternally strumming and spinning through
everyday purgatory and paradise, is both a penitent and rebel, beyond
contradiction. The robust, combustible
emotional range of spring-heeled Mountain Goats melodies never leaves much room
for error, but the new All Eternals Deck takes an especially risky turn
through what could easily settle into morbid clichés, or lectures about them.
Instead, Darnielle confidentially
confesses the costly allure of---call it superstition, religion, underground political
activities, science fiction, forbidden
facts---in the secret living history of this age, or any other, without waiting
for the Web to catch up. Dynamic chamber rock is a night nurse for the album’s
charged atmospheres and spooked vitality. Certain truths about yourself and
others might well be too much (and/or too little) information, though
Darnielle’s characters can and will take it. As he (currently) reads their kind’s
fortune (commenting on 1979 near-future prophet-driven teen gang movie The
Warriors), “The sun’s coming up and they’re safe, but you know the scars
are permanent now.”
Though certainty certainly can get
old---so, for this tour, perennial bassist Peter Hughes issues an advisory: the
MGs have thrown away the setlist of material they relied on for years. Instead, we’ll get many “ ...new songs, old
songs that haven't been performed in years and never with a full band, old
songs that have never been performed, period.” The “full band” now includes ace
guitarist-keyboard player Yuval Semo, also the arranger of All Eternal Deck
’s eerie, silky strings. Nevertheless, adds Hughes, “Most of these songs, we'd
really only had a chance to run through a handful of times.”
Furthering the adventurous potential of
this evening, veteran Mountain Goats (and Superchunk) drummer Jon Wurster, also
of the radio satire/prankster unit Scharpling & Wurster, will materialize
at the Wexner Center Store from 7:30-9:00 p.m., to sign his comedy CDs and bond
with the public. Brace yourselves.
The
Mountain Goats will be performing with supporting band Megafaun at theWexner
Center Performance Space on Monday, April 11. The show starts at 9 p.m. $16 all
audiences. For more information, please visit www.mountain-goats.com or
www.wexarts.org.