|
ALLMUSICGUIDE.COM
RECORD REVIEW
July
2003
By
Mark Deming
 
 |
Jay
Farrar's music since leaving
behind Uncle Tupelo had
suggested the work of a
man who has little desire
to be hemmed in by the sounds
he created in the past (not
unlike the attitude of his
former musical partner,
Jeff Tweedy). However, Farrar's
progress from the bracing
country-punk fusion of his
early UT sides has been
at once gradual and full
of uncertain steps, as if
he knew where he wanted
to go but seemed a bit fuzzy
about just how to get there.
After putting Son Volt on
the back burner, Farrar
seemed to have gained a
clearer perspective on his
creative directions with
his first solo album, Sebastopol,
but paradoxically his second
solo set, Terroir Blues,
finds him continuing to
stake out new musical and
sonic territory while stripping
his sound down to its framework.
The album's production is
at once adventurous and
spare; the distorted blues
structures of "Fool
King's Crown," the
multiple sonic layers of
"Hard Is the Fall,"
and the abstract "Space
Junk" pieces scattered
throughout the sequence
make it clear Farrar has
taken the more adventurous
textures of Sebastopol and
run with them. However,
at the same time Terroir
Blues (named for a French
word which describes the
way soil and environment
affects the grapes used
to make wine) is the most
purposefully stark album
Farrar has made since Uncle
Tupelo's March 16-20, 1992,
with the silences carrying
as much weight as the sounds.
The album's musical core
lies in the guitars of Farrar
and Mark Spencer, and many
of the album's most striking
tracks feature only one
or two other instruments,
such as the dark cello-infused
"Cahokian," and
"Out on the Road,"
which suggests Tim Buckley's
jazzier moments with the
addition of Lew Winer III's
flute. Terroir Blues
also finds Farrar embracing
the more cryptic corners
of his lyrical conceits;
these songs seem to have
far more to do with mood
than literal meanings, though
the warm but often downbeat
mood and the bookending
versions of "No Rolling
Back" (which begins
with the questions "Who
do you know?/Who do you
trust?/Who keeps you sane?/Who
cleans off the dust?")
embrace personal and worldly
concerns in a manner that
registers emotionally even
when it remains murky at
face value. Terroir Blues
is a significantly more
ambitious and confident
work from Farrar than Sebastopol,
but it's also more elusive,
and ultimately this is the
sort of record fans will
love, but the unfamiliar
will have a hard time embracing.
|