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The
Horse's Ha
Of The Cathmawr Yards (Hidden
Agenda)
The Horse's Ha was formed in 2002, when British
ex-patriot James Elkington and just South of the Mason Dixon
ex-patriot, Janet Beveridge Bean met at a Chicago concert
and started discussing the concept of playing other people's
songs in expensive wine bars for money. A set-list of roughly
20 standards was drawn up and then gradually abandoned over
the course of a year as James started to write original songs
for Janet to sing. They soon joined forces with stellar Chicago
musicians Fred Lonberg-Holm, Nick Macri and Charles Rumback
to create a sophisticated and compelling musical hybrid between
jazz and folk. Their sound is infused with echoes of the English
folk revival, that morph into lulling Bossa Nova rhythms and
find their way right back to pure pop, giving the The Horse’s
Ha a uniquely enduring edge.
The band’s lineage has deep Chicago roots.
Janet Bean is a member Chicago's Eleventh Dream Day in addition
to her continuing country music partnership with Catherine
Irwin, forming the duo, Freakwater. James Elkington was leader
of The Zincs and performs solo. Fred Lonberg-Holm, Chicago’s
premier improvisational cello player, has richly contributed
to forging the vibrant improvisational jazz scene in Chicago
as well as working on recordings by Wilco, Jim O'Rourke and
countless others. His masterful playing is underpinned by
the rhythm section of bass player Nick Macri, an ex-Zincs
member whose wide-ranging history has seen him go from his
own band, Euphone, to playing with Mark Eitzel and Jeremy
Enigk, and Charles Rumback, a jazz drummer relocated from
Kansas who performs with his own band Leaves as well as Chicago
groups L'Altra and Via Tania. These players set the stage
for James and Janet’s voices, that harmonize throughout,
to bring you the first album by The Horse's Ha: Of the
Cathmawr Yards.
Work began on Of the Cathmawr Yards
in January of 2008 and was recorded and mixed by Griffin Rodriguez
(who has recorded albums by Beirut and Akron/Family under
the name Blue Hawaii) at his south-side Chicago studio, Shape
Shoppe. The band recorded in bits and pieces over the next
few weeks, surviving parking tickets and foul weather, with
additional recording and common sense provided by Mark Greenberg
(from the Coctails and 100 varied Chicago bands) at his studio,
Mayfair. Of the Cathmawr Yards captures The Horse's
Ha in an almost live setting, with all the intimacy and invention
of their shows still intact: In “Liberation,”
Fred Lonberg-Holm plays a two-minute solo that arcs from plaintive
single notes to a fiery frenzy and recalls John Cale's viola-playing
at its most possessed. Macri and Rumback remain fluid and
responsive throughout, and manage to keep the beat steady
while taking the group into uncharted territory in "Asleep
In A Waterfall' and the album's closer, “Map Of Stars.”
Elkington's deft guitar playing shows a strong English folk
influence, but steps out to take a ringing solo worthy of
Johnny Marr in “The Piss Choir,” while the massed
voices of Janet Bean stop the show in “Heiress.”
Martin Wenk, Janet's friend from Calexico, generously recorded
some trumpet parts from his home in Germany for the song “Left
Hand” to complete the album.
“The Cathmawr Yards” is the name
of a fictitious graveyard in Wales and is the setting for
the Dylan Thomas short story about zombies, entitled “The
Horse's Ha.” Although no reference to Thomas or the
story are made in the songs on Of The Cathmawr Yards,
the lyrics themselves resonate with similarly dark and fantastical
themes: talking woodcuts, walking skeletons, and at least
11 references to the moon merge together to form an unsettling
yet familiar feeling that forces other than our own are at
work in the physical world. A diva digs her own grave in “Asleep
In A Waterfall” and modern-day witches are offered a
friendly warning in the album's opening lullaby, “Plumb'”
"So hold on to old hands, starting with yours / They're
softer than leather and harder than oars / And row your rivers
of temperance and toil / If you won't float in water, you're
bound for the soil.” Elsewhere, mankind is under attack
from nature in “The Piss Choir,” and “Map
Of Stars” celebrates being lost in the wilderness as
being set free from all timely constraints, both real and
imagined: "Make kindling from clocks and cinders your
watch / You have you no place to be / You're ripped at the
roots and willed by the winds / A cloud with four limbs of
fire.”
The Horse's Ha, driven by Bean's swooning voice,
Elkington's finger-picked acoustic guitar, Lonberg-Holm's
inspired cello playing and the artful rhythm section of Macri
and Rumback, reconcile the new and old to form a unified debut
that is Of the Cathmawr Yards.
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