Dr. J’s take… The Brilliance of Trace—Son Volt’s Rusted Hymn to the Wreckage

The first time I heard Son Volt’s Trace, I thought, “Ah hell, here it is: Uncle Tupelo’s divorce decree, notarized on reel-to-reel, filed away in some Missouri courthouse basement where the plaster peels and the janitor drinks Falstaff or Bud Light out of a Styrofoam cup.” Jay Farrar stomps out of the wreckage, lugging his guitar like a busted-down jalopy radiator, and instead of screaming, he sighs, drawls, lets the words leak out slow like oil seeping into gravel. This isn’t rock and roll as firecracker catharsis; it’s rust-belt requiem. It’s the sound of gas stations going dark one by one on Route 66 and every half-drunk loner still praying the neon sign will flicker back to life.

See, Farrar isn’t interested in saving your soul or even giving you a hook to hum while you brush your teeth. He’s interested in reminding you that America has grit and grime, and the old idols, they are rotting.

Listen to “Windfall.” That harmonica doesn’t soar; it wheezes like your uncle’s lungs after three decades underground in coal mines. Yet it lifts you anyway, like catching a breeze on a road you know dead-ends in thirty miles. Farrar’s voice is carved from stone, immovable, half-asleep but never indifferent. He sings like he’s standing in the ruins of the sixties, looking around and muttering, “Guess this is what we’ve got left.” And dammit, what we’ve got left sounds gorgeous.

Trace isn’t alt-country. Alt-country is a marketing gimmick, an excuse for journalists to pretend they’ve discovered a new continent when really they’ve just found the same sad barstools Willie and Merle already angry because they don’t recognize the place. Trace is country with its skin peeled off, electrified and nailed to a telegraph pole. It’s Neil Young after the hangover, it’s Gram Parsons without the messiah complex. It’s the hum of America when the AM station fades out and all you’ve got is static—and suddenly the static is more moving than the song that was playing ever was.

Take “Drown.” Farrar growls it like a prophecy for people already underwater. The guitars crash like waves on cheap levees, the kind that always break. It’s furious and exhausted at the same time, the way you get when you’ve fought too long and realized the fight was fixed from the start. Then there’s “Tear Stained Eye,” where he asks if seeing a river run dry will make you start crying. Spoiler: it won’t. You’ll just stare and keep driving, and that numbness is exactly what Farrar’s documenting—he’s the archivist of our collective shrug.

But here’s the trick, the brilliance: instead of despair, Trace gives you dignity. The dignity of standing in a field that used to be a town, looking at the weeds grow through concrete and saying, “Okay, maybe this is freedom.” Farrar doesn’t want your hope. He wants your honesty. The honesty that says America’s dreams are boarded-up diners and broken jukeboxes, but inside those ruins, a few songs still rattle around like sacred relics.

And maybe that’s why Trace still matters. Because it’s not trying to sell you redemption. It’s not asking you to believe in the comeback of some mythic heartland. It’s just holding up the Polaroid of what’s gone and saying, “Here, take a look. Doesn’t it hurt beautifully?”

In the end, Trace is a ghost road record. It takes you down highways that don’t exist anymore, past radio towers that no longer transmit, through towns that can’t even hold onto their own zip codes. But by the time you get to the last track, you don’t feel lost. You feel found—because someone finally put into music that vague ache you’ve been hauling around, the one you thought was just your private sorrow. Turns out it’s everybody’s sorrow. And Jay Farrar, God bless his gravelly heart, sang it so we could all drive through it together.

Rocking The Year Away: Simon Powell

Notes from a small island.

Finally, Autumn’s here (or ‘Fall’ as I believe my colonial chums prefer it!) and we’re back into the proper ‘grown up’ seasons.  No more adverts with teeth-whitened, permatanned ‘eejits’ enquiring whether you’re body’s ‘beach ready’ in the accusative tone that suggests they’re talking about the latest pod of whales that’s lost its way and floundered!  At last, we’re into the introspective comfort zone – the time of chilly dusks, open fires, unfashionable knitwear, and the thought of the rapidly approaching festive season.

Growing up in the UK in the early 90s, that glorious slide into Christmas and the New Year inevitably meant starting to ponder what John Peel would be including in his end-of-year ’Festive 50’ of favorite musical offerings from the preceding 12 months. After what seems to have been a particularly bountiful year so far, I was starting to mull over just that question; “What have been my songs/records of the year so far?”  And, as happenstance would have it, this same quandary was also exercising the inestimable Dr J.

Thus, following a brief bit of Twitter banter, I found myself landed with some homework!  I mean, I know in the ‘social media’ age everything’s more interactive, but I certainly didn’t foresee being set an assignment from my favorite DJ!  So, buckle up, strap in, or just assume the brace position as we careen towards what I’m going to pompously call my ‘Festive Fiasco’!  And if this doesn’t get me Magna Cum Laude in Rock ‘N Roll then harsh words will be had.

Anyway, enough of the waffle and down to business!  Whilst it would be easy to dash off a massive list of all the songs that have really made a mark for me this year, I thought I’d try and just pick the five that have resonated the most.  So, in no particular order, here goes…

1a. – Son Volt – Route (from the ‘Trace’ LP).  Yes, I’m well aware this first surfaced in the mid-90s.  But this is my post, so I make the rules. Capiche?!  Anyway, my justification is that Dr. J played this on Your Tuesday Afternoon Alternative the other week and, frankly, everyone needs a bit of Jay Farrar in their lives.  To my mind, he’s got an uncanny ability to make the listener empathize with the protagonist/antagonist in his songs, which leads us neatly onto…

1b. – Matt Derda & The High Watts – Moonshine.  In a similar vein to Farrar, Matt Derda’s got the enviable ability to summon up characters that inhabit his songs in 3D, with fully rounded lives. None more so than the back woods distiller/bootlegger who’s the subject of ‘Moonshine’, originally featured in his 2022 ‘You Didn’t Know’ release. Whereas the album version can be thought of in terms of a widescreen, technicolor ‘family matinee’, the opening track from the gratefully received ‘The Law Office’ Live EP is the full John Woo ‘X-rated’ ketchup splatterer.  Due in no part to young Derda’s blistering guitar work.  More please!

2. Mike Bankhead – Latent.  Ok, could easily have gone with the beautiful ‘Mont Blanc Massif’ from Mike’s project with Ruth Fawcett (Yeah! Up the Brits!), ‘We Met In Paris’, but just had to go with this barnstormer from the ‘I Am Experienced’ EP.  Casting the mind back, I’ve got a feeling that the first episode of ‘Your Tuesday Afternoon Alternative’ that I caught featured Mike in session and that’s why this one’s probably stuck with me.  Regardless, you just can’t argue with the driving riff and barely contained fury/disdain that Mike brings with the lyrics.  Definitely get the impression that, if it wasn’t in polite company, this song would happily take you outside and give you a proper kicking by the stage door.  Proper punk in my book.  This brings me to my next pick…

3. Elephants & StarsBled Out At The Scene. The first salvo from their awe-inspiring ‘Get Your Own Army’ EP, which features more hooks than a pirate convention.  Whilst featuring riffs that’d strip the paint off a battleship at 1,000 yards, there’s a real delicacy in the lyrics, that mourn the seemingly inevitable dissolution of a relationship.  No anger, no accusations, just helplessly observing the inevitable.  Which, inadvertently, segues neatly to my next pick.

4. Will Payne Harrison (feat. Liv.) – Full Moon Fever (from the ‘Tioga Titan’ Deluxe edition LP).  If I was given an award for ‘Single of the Year’, then I think that this would definitely be somewhere in the top one.  Unlike ‘Bled Out At The Scene’, this haunting beauty delicately documents the end of an affair with two parts regret, three-part recrimination, and a good dash of whisky in the face.  Will’s deft lyricism and stripped-back musicianship are heartrendingly brought to life thanks to the vocal contribution of Liv., whose delivery here is nothing less than immaculate.  Whilst the prevailing rule may be that ‘earworm’ tends to refer to more upbeat, ‘poppy’ numbers, this one sticks with you and you can’t help but find yourself humming along to it as you go about your day.  A classic?  Well, you tell me?

5. Van PlatingThe Heron.  To be totally transparent, I could quite happily have picked any and all tracks from Van’s new record, ‘Orange Blossom Child’, for my ‘best of the year’ so far.  It really is the ‘Swiss Army Knife’ of records, from sumptuous stompers like the title track (featuring the aforementioned Mr Harrison on Killer Axe), through to the more delicate numbers like ‘Joshua’ that tug the heartstrings as deftly as the most practiced of pickpockets.  However, for me, it’s this debut single that just demands attention. It’s not so much a song as the soundtrack to a songwriter’s life, where you just need to close your eyes and you’re utterly immersed in her environment.  And yet, like all superstars (and I’m absolutely convinced that we’re lucky enough to be witnessing ‘one of our own’ heading ineffably towards the ‘big leagues’), The Heron wisely counsels that whilst we mere mortals can look, we’re not getting to the other side of the velvet rope.  In the third verse, Van sings, “Looking for a hint to come my way.  A billboard I could stand on.”  And there’s a sense of inevitability about it.  Some folks just belong on that billboard, and I’m convinced Van Plating is next in the queue.  And if there’s one thing we Brits know about it’s queuing!

Cheers!!

Today’s YTAA Playlist

The playlist today includes new music from Lydia Loveless, Al Holbrook, Bob Mould, Chris Forsyth, The Beths, Momma, Mike Bankhead and Tino, Waxahatchee, Speaking Suns, Rufrano, Nada Surf and more! Plus music from David Payne, Wussy, The Story Changes, The Typical Johnsons, Shrug, The Pullouts, Tim Pritchard, The 1984 Draft, The Nautical Theme, The Flamin’ Groovies, Me & Mountains, The Mayflies USA, Toxic Reasons, The Regrettes, American Werewolf Academy, Ass Ponys, Greg Dulli, Son Volt and Samantha Crain.

Some looking back indie courtesy of James, The Smiths, Graham Parker and The Rumour and Brainiac. And a live classic from The Replacements! We pay some small tribute to far overlooked songwriter Emitt Rhodes.

So give the playlist a listen or three!

your-tuesday-afternoon-alternative-color copy

 

Once is Not Enough: Best of 2015 Shows

imagesThere was so much great music in 2015 that we are planning on two back to back radio shows celebrating that music!  We will even be joined by some special guests!  We will have our list of some of the most interesting music from 2015 — well, at least for Dr. J and Mrs Dr. J but we think that we will have at least a few things you will enjoy!

It was an amazing year for Dayton and local music with new releases from Andy Gabbard, Good Luck Year, The New Old-Fashioned, Brat Curse, The Repeating Arms, Moira, Ricked Wicky, Smug Brothers, Tim Gabard, Motel Beds, The Werks, The 1984 Draft, and many more!

We also had some new music from Me & Mountains – a few sneak peeks at their upcoming record ‘Gold’ which included the title track and a fantastic tune in The Only Way To Be.  The later tune written by a father to his young son.  There was also new music from Good English who had a big year in 2015 as well as a few peeks at the new Manray record.  There were many fantastic live shows that we will have to discuss as well

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o1hrRNY7GxM

This was a year that gave us new music from outside of Dayton too!  For music lovers across genres there was some great music from:  The Bottlerockets, Lightouts, The Decemberists, Mittenfields, Bad Bad Hats, Low, My Morning Jacket, Ryan Adams, Sleater-Kinney, Sea of Bees, Jason Isbell, Timeshares, Steve Earle & The Dukes, Ultimate Painting, Turbo Fruits, Wilco, Mikal Cronin, Waxahatchee, Varsity, Father John Misty, The Worriers, Pocket Panda, White Reaper, Twin River, a live records from The Drive-By Truckers and The Jayhawks and a fantastic 20th anniversary re-release from Son Volt.

So, join us as we celebrate some terrific music from 2015 beginning this coming Tuesday on WUDR from 3-6pm (e)!

DrJ