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Jan. 21, 2000 |
The songs on House's third release, "til you've seen mine" (Catamount), aren't necessarily social issue songs, but they do grapple with the deeper, darker questions of the soul -- questions all the more necessary when most everyone seems to prefer unexamined bliss.
"til you've seen mine"
House is a misfit, a philosopher vagabond searching for at least a scrap of an answer. A poet who became a singer, he is a middle-aged Nashville outsider whose songs are far too raw and complicated to be folk songs and too wordy to be country. Many of his songs express a desire for problems to be resolved, a purpose to be revealed, or, at the very least, for something to matter. More often than not, though, the only satisfaction lies in being discontent. Or depressed. Or drunk. Think of it as existential angst dressed down as country music. It is the questions House raises, directly and indirectly, that leave the deepest imprint. Questions such as those borne of loneliness and longing in "The Cold Hard Curve of a Question Mark," of regret in "Letter From My Father" and, ultimately, of purpose and even salvation in "Where Will You Lay Your Head," on which House sings: And what will it mean to you then If House has predecessors, they are the contrarian, despairing poets of folk, rock and country. You can hear Hank Williams' fatalism on "Long Hard Drinking," Bob Dylan's unorthodox phrasing (and twangy whine) on "Elmer Smith" and "The Black Sheep," and Phil Ochs' plaintiveness on "Canada." While "til you've seen mine" offers a mix of traditional acoustic folk and bluegrass melodies and foot-stomping country arrangements, it is the lyrics that are each song's most prominent feature. Like Dylan, House writes lines so lengthy there often seems not enough music to contain all of the words. The result is often a fevered rush through lyrics that sound like the Southern Gothic confessions of a William Faulkner or Flannery O'Connor character. On "Down in the Hole," House sings: You ain't heard no weeping till you heard me wail Dark and unsparing, House's anguish lets no one off the hook. To listen to these songs is to listen to the torment of a soul that cannot find even one moment of peace.
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