Soulsavers
Broken
(Columbia Records)
Soulsavers return in August 2009 with Broken,
their sublime new album featuring Mark Lanegan, Jason Pierce,
Richard Hawley, Mike Patton and more….
In 2007, when Soulsavers released their second
opus It’s Not How Far You Fall, It’s How You
Land, the collective’s leader Rich Machin explained
what lay behind it. “I didn't want to be in an electronic
band. Or a rock'n'roll band. I wanted the freedom to explore.”
Today, he reaffirms that position. “I love all kinds
of music, which allows me to open all these doors. There’s
nothing better than bringing in great people who inspire,
to keep you on top of your game, and to keep things fresh
and never boring. That's the nature of what we've set up here."
Soulsavers had begun as more of an electronic
affair, with Machin partnering studio engineer Ian Glover
for the 2003 debut Tough Guys Don’t Dance.
Josh Haden of slow-core moodists Spain (the band, not the
country), added three vocals, but the following It’s
Not How Far You Fall... set a new benchmark, threading soul,
gospel, rock, jazz, country into the mix and a matching spread
of singers. Principally, though, out front was the indefatigable
Mark Lanegan, former Screaming Tree whose profound, growling
croon was the perfect match for Soulsavers’ broader,
richer vein of sepulchral Cinerama.
Besides Lanegan’s eight vocals, there
were telling contributions from The London Community Gospel
Choir, Will Oldham and Doves' Jimi Goodwin; voices to throw
light and shade on Machin’s expansive music and to contrast
Lanegan’s tobacco-tarred laments.
The album went down an absolute storm: “An
album of such devotional beauty that even on first listen
it creates an abundantly transcendent experience,” went
one review. “One listen to their spine-tingling second
effort will have you ready to up sticks and follow them to
the ends of the earth,” read another.
Now you must be prepared to follow Soulsavers even further,
for Broken is even better, a future classic that
delivers 14 tracks of wide-ranging majesty. The main difference
this time, says Rich, is the influence of Soulsavers’
stage incarnation. “Touring has definitely brought the
guitars to the front of Broken and it’s got
a more soulful twist too. And though it’s clearly has
some very dark overtones, I don’t think it’s quite
as dark as the last.”
True, though Lanegan – who reigns over
ten tracks here – still sounds like the weight of the
world sits on his shoulders. But the story this time begins
with another voice. “Sunrise,” which is being
released exclusively as a 7” single (and download) before
Broken, is a west coast-drenched, lone-plains-drifter
lament sung by Will Oldham, with Lanegan supplying lyrics
and music. Returning the favour, Lanegan takes on Oldham’s
“You Will Miss Me When I Burn”; it’s the
B-side to “Sunrise” and an album cut.
Like its predecessor, Broken was recorded
in Los Angeles, in the wee small hours. It took about a year
to finish, Rich and Mark bouncing ideas off each other, and
back and forth between LA and Rich’s base in the north
of England, until it was time to sign off on the record. Not
that Rich interfered with the wordsmith. “Mark’s
lyrics are so good, you don’t want to wade in there
and ask for changes,” he says. Regarding any lyrical
theme, Rich recently told one journalist, “it started
as a concept record, but we forgot what the concept we started
with was,” though he now admits is was a flippant comment,
and there was never such a thing. “Mark and I have never
got into any kind of conversation about lyrics. His lyrics
speak for themselves, and anyway, one thing he’s never
going to do is shed some light on anything!”
Perhaps Broken is a little lighter
than the last because of its circumstances. It’s Not
How Far You Fall... was funded off Rich’s credit cards,
without a record deal in place. “During the mix, you
realize what a dumb thing you might have done, so it became
quite stressful,” he recalls. “It was a huge undertaking.
But V2 came in and bailed us out.” Now Soulsavers have
a true foundation, from V2 to loyal press and fans alike.
Not only do Soulsavers have a full support
network, but they can count on fans who themselves pursue
dark-eyed rock hues. One such fan is Spiritualized’s
Jason Pierce, who duets with Lanegan on “Pharaoh’s
Chariot,” a song that came about after both bands toured
together in 2008. That most left-field of mainstream rollers,
Mike Patton duets with Mark on “Unbalanced Pieces,”
Broken’s most electronic-enhanced cut, while
Richard Hawley adds shadowy backing vocals to “Shadows
Fall,” and finally Gibby Haynes of Butthole Surfers
infamy appears alongside Lanegan on “Death Bells”.
In the studio the band added Martyn LeNoble (Porno For Pyros
+ Jane’s Addiction) on bass duties.
Broken also introduces a new voice,
Red Ghost (aka Rosa Agostino). Her suitably dark, sultry tones
unfurl across three standout tracks - the stately “By
My Side,” the glowering “Praying Ground”
and the sensual, jazz-blues of “Rolling Skies,”
on which she trades verses with Mark over a steamy, New Orleans-tinted
groove. “This young Australian girl from Sydney kept
on sending me demos,” Rich recalls, “and she was
better than most everything else we’d heard. We traded
ideas, and it really gelled.”
All the other amazing collaborations notwithstanding,
Mark Lanegan remains at the album’s core, for which
Rich is eternally grateful. “When you hear him throw
a vocal down, it’s incredibly inspiring and pushes you
to raise your game even further. He really brings out the
best in you.” Rich, for his part, sounds at the top
of his game too. “Shadows Fall,” “Pharaoh’s
Chariot,” and “All The Way Down,” have a
rich, gospel undertow. “Death Bells” malevolently
rocks the hardest, while “You Will Miss Me When I Burn,”
“Highway Kind,” and “Can’t Catch The
Train” showcases Soulsavers’ becalmed, solitary
side. And then there is the album’s stunning, eight-minute
version of “Some Misunderstanding,” written by
original Byrd and fallen angel Gene Clark for his epochal
1974 album No Other, which Lanegan sings with bruising conviction
- and don’t forget the superlative guitar coda, which
Neil Young would surely have been proud of nailing. “I
grew up listening to lots of that music,” says Rich.
“I was always a big Neil Young fan, for example. It’s
pretty inspiring to get up into Laurel Canyon and around those
parts, particularly when you’re making a record yourself.”
Finally, Rich contributes two instrumentals,
which bare his soundtrack soul. Soulsavers songs have unsurprisingly
been used for US TV dramas, from “Grey’s Anatomy,”
“Friday Night Lights,” & “CSI: NY”,
through to HBO’s new smash hit, “In Treatment,”
but Rich – a huge film buff – has his eyes on
the bigger screen. Brilliant “auditions” both,
“The Seventh Proof” and ‘Wise Blood”
are gloriously moody in the Morricone/Nicolai (both formative
influences of Rich’s) Italian school of killer orchestrations.
To help him, he called on a contemporary Italian arranger
Daniele Luppi: "He brought alive our ideas, which has
pushed me harder to try and work a lot more in that film world.”
What of the future? Rich is committed to keeping things fresh,
“but Mark and I have got this thing, and we’ll
always work together one way or another.” It seems that,
for the time being, they’ve saved each other souls,
and now they’re out to save yours...
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