“Poor Moon” represents a personal, very expansive view of America and Americana music, alternately recalling Dylan, Hank Williams and any back-porch pickup band, yet the superlatively breezy country-rock vibe conceals bleak implications about morality, fatherhood, and country. Taylor sees a darkness, and to his considerable credit, he never flinches.”
The past few weeks have brought a rush of recognition for Hiss Golden Messenger, Poor Moon, and Paradise of Bachelors, for which we’re grateful and humbled. In the wake of the epic release party concert (see the previous post for photos; stay tuned here for recordings), below is our accounting of the recent slew of very positive views, reviews, and interviews. If you like what you see/hear here, please consider purchasing the album before the limited edition sells out.
NPR World Café Next has posted a Poor Moon review and two streaming tracks. This came as a most welcome surprise!
“…Blends the tried-and-true methods of home-grown bluegrass with the catchiness of contemporary indie folk… Showcases [an] understanding of the folk tradition as history that lives, grows and moves its audience in deep, unpredictable ways.”
–NPR
Alastair McKay has written a well-researched and elegantly referential four-star review of Poor Moon, accompanied by a brief interview, for the January issue of Uncut Magazine. It’s now available on U.S. newsstands, but not yet online–in the meantime, you can read it below (click the image for a larger scan.)
“A small but grand statement, achieving country-soul greatness… Poor Moon is a beautiful, accomplished record… ‘A Working Man Can’t Make It No Way’ deserves to be covered by Merle Haggard… Poor Moon is gospel, played with blue notes. It is the sound of a sweet soul contemplating deliverence; as mellow and fierce and fearful as that.”
Poor Moon earns the #7 spot in Shuffle Magazine’s Carolinas Top 25 of 2011, alongside some formidable company. Bryan Reed’s HGM feature “The Seeker” plumbs some of the deeper deeps of M.C. Taylor’s songs. And yours truly considers futures past, and the role of technology and retrospection for this issue of Shuffle’s Insider essay, entitled “Dem Bones: On Musical Nostalgia.” (You can read both in their paper layout format here.) We’re honored to report that the estimable music critic Simon Reynolds, quoted therein, has some kind words of praise for “Dem Bones” on his Retromania blog.
Shuffle Editor and fine writer John Schacht explores more notions of time in his article “Music as Conversation: Hiss Golden Messenger,” published by Blurt.
Dirty Impound has Dennis Cook’s wonderful, probing, long-from interview with M.C. Taylor, which manages to cover the Bible, the Grateful Dead, and the symptoms of the current contagious media landscape.
“While a great deal of what’s on offer today is as deep as a paper cut, there are beautiful, thorny exceptions, music that pricks us and reminds us of our humanity and potential transcendence. North Carolina-based-former-S.F.-area ontologically charged roots rockers Hiss Golden Messenger till green, fragrant ground, the smell of overturned earth redolent of decay and life in all its tendril throwing glory rising from their work… This band shuffles with archetypes and grasps at the sky in the hopes some higher power high-fives them somewhere along their weary road. It is workingman’s music that melds elements of Merle Haggard with Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy and Rev. Gary Davis, where songs pulled from usually hidden places serve as the listener’s companions into their own craggy, shadowy reaches. By turns worshipful and wary, Hiss Golden Messenger is bread for incarnation and transubstantiation, feeding the body in the here and now while simultaneously nourishing less obvious appetites in one’s soul. It also happens to be great music sung in Taylor’s lovely, almost-too-honest voice, a dirt field relative to Sam Cooke and the Jerry Garcia who sang ballads that make one feel split open. The music is an evolving blur of folk, country, blues and the outside-the-mainstream work of pioneers like Roy Harper, Bert Jansch and John Martyn.”
Thanks to Chaz at Durham’s Bull City Records for his enthusiastic review.
The Independent Weekly generously previewed the Poor Moon Release Party last week. And it is truly an honor for Poor Moon to be selected by Indy Music Editor and Pitchfork contributor Grayson Currin as the #1 local record of the year. All this national and international press is gratifying, but local accolades always taste sweetest somehow. In Grayson’s eloquent words:
“Poor Moon, the most fully developed album yet by indie rock veteran and new Durham resident M.C. Taylor, might be strong enough to reclaim [Americana], that noun of convenience. This is, at least, pan-American music, gracefully shading a bedrock of refined songcraft with touches of soul, funk, bluegrass, classic rock and ancient country. Taylor delivers arrangements that are alternately pretty as a Southern daybreak and threatening as a late summer thunderstorm rolling across the horizon. None of these flourishes seems intentional or forced; they simply seem like the output of lifelong synthesis. And on Poor Moon, Taylor takes nothing for granted, evaluating his career, God, sobriety and sanity with an absolute rebelliousness of spirit. Too young to be told and too wise to be foolish, Taylor writes, sings and records from a place of great wonder, as if these old sounds and these proverbial thoughts are new. For these perfect 45 minutes, they certainly feel that way.”
–Grayson Currin, The Independent Weekly
Thanks to everyone near and far who has taken the time to listen and comment on this remarkable collection of songs. The Bachelors feel like proud uncles.
Many thanks to everyone who came out to the show at Nightlight on Saturday. It was one for the books. Special thanks to the Nightlight staff, our brothers at All Day Records, and especially all the musicians, particularly those that traveled from afar to grace the stage and conjure what for these Bachelors stand as the finest ever live versions of the songs from the Hiss Golden Messenger catalog. Those who stuck around until the bitter end deserve special recognition for tearing up the dancefloor to the sounds of DJ Mental Feelings and the PoB Soundsystem. The Bobby Charles Brunch Jam presented the perfect hangover cure: “Street People,” “Small Town Talk,” and “Tennessee Blues” sounded sublimely shambling in the Sunday sun.
M.C. Taylor and Scott Hirsch will soon begin editing the various recordings of the above performances as well as some rehearsal tapes recorded in the days prior to the concert. We’ll be sure to alert you when that set is available for listening and purchase.We hope that this stellar incarnation of Hiss Golden Messenger gathers again soon…
In the meantime, pick up your copy of Poor Moonhere before they’re gone for good.
(Photos by the Bachelors, Constance Mensh, and Laura King.)
Interview Magazine–as in Andy Warhol’s Crystal Ball of Pop–has just published an interview with M.C. Taylor of Hiss Golden Messenger about songwriting, his new Poor Moon album, and what it means to be a professional folklorist. Check it out here, and buy your copy of the LP here.
Today the Bachelors and M.C. Taylor assembled nearly half of the rather limited pressing of the brand new Hiss Golden Messenger Poor Moon LP. Pre-order your copy here before the official release on November 1st.
September 10, 2001, All Day Records’ Hopscotch Party at Lump, Raleigh.
L-R: Steve Gunn, Cory Rayborn of Three Lobed Recordings, Terry Lonergan, Mike Gangloff and Nathan Bowles of the Black Twig Pickers, and Head Messenger M.C. Taylor.
Here is another great David Lee profile from North Carolina-centric Our State magazine.
Here is a review of Vision from the Art of the Rural blog.
Finally, check here and here for two Transatlantic shoutouts to Poor Moon, the forthcoming LP from Hiss Golden Messenger. Head Messenger M.C. Taylor is featured among some stellar company here, including Lindsey Buckingham, Jim Ford, Ry Cooder, Purling Hiss, Wilco, PoB pal Meg Baird, et al.
Please pick up a copy of the latest issue of righteous magazine Wax Poetics (#47) to read Contributing Editor Jon Kirby’s thoughtful profile of David Lee on page 28. Mr. Lee finds himself among illustrious company in these pages, which are populated by the likes of the great Solomon Burke (the King of Rock ‘n’ Soul himself, RIP); cosmic songster Terry Callier; PoB hero and Carolinas favorite Roy C; the legendary Bobby Womack and Lamont Dozier; and even Earth, Wind, and Fire.
Exciting things are afoot here at Paradise of Bachelors–stay tuned for announcements about our next suite of releases due in the autumn, which includes records by Willie French Lowery and his bands Plant and See and Lumbee, as well as our first release of new music by a contemporary North Carolina artist.
On April 2, 2011, David Lee accepted the North Carolina Folklore Society’sBrown-Hudson Award and performed two songs, “I Can’t Believe You’re Gone” and “I’ll Never Get Over Losing You,” accompanied by his custom cassette backing track. We’re delighted to share some video of the event below.
You can read Doug Mosurock’s recent capsule review of Said I Had a Vision, our anthology LP documenting Mr. Lee’s career, for Dusted Magazine (scroll to the bottom of the page to the “Various Artists” section) and his Still Single blog.