| Jacob
Golden –
“I try and play the guitar like Nina
Simone played the piano – with fear and respect.”
There are moments while watching a Jacob Golden live performance
when time appears to stand still and nothing else seems to matter.
Amazingly, this feeling is often replicated when listening to Jacob’s
second album Revenge Songs; the clatter of eternity is
shut down and the quiet exactitude of the here and now is somehow
more relevant, more poignant, than the moment prior to
the needle hitting the spot. Candidly, Jacob reveals that it was
important to him that the recording itself felt emotional. “I
wanted to make a warm sounding record and I didn't have a budget
so I had to be very creative, “he says. “It was a two-fold
process: the capturing of the main performances of me playing and
singing happened in a very live way in all sorts of different places;
then came the layering, the harmonies and little sounds that glue
the whole thing together. I mixed the album on my laptop and fed
the sounds through guitar amps and old speakers to get the vibe
right. I wanted to make something that worked well in headphones,
a sort of paranoid blissed-out, sad and slightly stoned lullaby.”
Jacob approaches music from an emotional place and is obsessed
with finding beautiful sounding spaces to record in – like
old buildings and car parks.
He found that taking pieces of recordings made in several different
spaces
lent a real character to the songs and that there was something
immediate and beautiful
about capturing an idea when it hits and wherever he happened to
be. He reveals that he recorded Zero Integrity – the
song that ushers Revenge Songs to a close - quickly with
only one microphone and that, just as he started the song,
an ambulance drove by the house making “a real racket”.
Naturally, Jacob kept recording and when he listened back to the
tape he realised that it completely set the mood of the song and
that he would have to keep it as there’d be no way of recreating
that moment.
Revenge Songs is
packed with integrity and more than its fair share of intrigue. Out Come
The Wolves is a breathtakingly acute pop song that seems toinhabit some
kind of lost-future landscape peopled by the ghosts of Zager and Evans (In
The Year 2525) and The Mamas and Papas. Indeed, Jacob’s microcosmic/
macrocosmic take on the American Bubble is all but impenetrable: “Out
come the wolves/the hunting of our great American idols/but the ants will march
until their Queen/has come god damn downtown James Brown - what’s taken
you so long/your kids are starving” although another line “the
weeping wall of music sings but radio has lost that loving feeling” implies
an innocent daydream has become a kind of nightmare. Another track, Pretend,
features the repetitive refrain “If I Had a Hammer was my mother’s
favourite song” lain over the top of a hauntingly primitive Beatles-esque
guitar. (Golden has revealed that the Peter Paul and Mary version of this song
was indeed his mother’s favourite.) Yet another song, On A Saturday, features
the infectious closing refrain: “I want to sit and watch the girls in
Soho Square, I fell in love so many times just sitting there.” And yes,
that’s one of those moments when time stands still.
Jacob reveals that
the driving force of his music is his attempt to rise above his circumstances. "I
know revenge sounds
like a negative concept,” he says, “but for me it represents
the idea of accepting your inner struggle, standing tall in the
face of doubt and failure.” His songs are intimate confessionals
- “little catastrophes” - that chart his traumatic
childhood as a single child who was orphaned by the age of 16.
He lived with his mother (who converted the garage connected to
their house into an apartment for battered women) in Sacramento,
then, when she died, with the father he had never known, only for
him to die when Jacob reached 16. Jacob subsequently fled to England,
signed to Rough Trade (with his band Birthday) and then released
the solo album Hallelujah World before becoming disillusioned
with the whole process and relocating to Portland, Oregon. Shine
A Light documents this period somewhat - "The record
company had pushed for a hard, hard sell but I couldn't check out
from the roach motel" as does another song, Bluebird -
not on Revenge Songs - that Jacob performs live on a regular
basis.
Jacob wrote most of the material for Revenge Songs after
he moved to Portland to pursue regular employment. "I was
getting hung up on the career thing,” he says, “but
the distance and perspective of Portland was an inspiration, and
it made me realise that a musician is what I naturally am." It
was here he discovered “a great underground folk scene with
bands playing in houses, people drinking wine and having a bit
of community” and here too that he hit on the idea of a living
room tour. “I've never really liked playing in dark stinky
rock clubs”, he says. “I'm much more interested in
sharing an experience with people then being on a stage.” Last
year Jacob toured the UK both conventionally and in response to
requests from fans to perform in their homes. It may not have been
the quickest, easiest or most profitable way to reach the public
but as Jacob points out: “You make an unbelievable life-long
connection with those people.”
The UK acclaim for Revenge Songs has been immediate and
universal - the Sunday Times called it “a stunning debut
and a must-buy” and the Evening Standard “a towering
achievement” whilst MOJO called it “the most gorgeous
break-up record since Beck’s Sea Change” and
CLASH “arguably the work of the greatest singer-songwriter
of the current generation”. This must come as an enormous
relief to a man who admits he wrote the words to I’m
Your Man whilst “half-asleep” - ha! – but
it is also an acknowledgement that Revenge Songs – that “handmade
Pet Sounds for the cut and paste generation” – is a
truly wondrous piece of work.
Revenge Songs is out now.
*****
Jacob Golden
Revenge Songs
(bigHelium/Echo)
“The most gorgeous break-up record
since Beck’s Sea Change”
- MOJO
“A stunning debut and a must-buy”
– SUNDAY TIMES
“A towering achievement”
– EVENING STANDARD
Jacob Golden, who single-handedly seems to occupy a space somehow
left vacant between Beck and Daniel Johnston, will be releasing
the sensational Revenge Songs on bigHelium/Echo on February
5th, 2008. The album will be sold exclusively at Barnes & Noble
and online at Barnes & Noble.com (www.bn.com).
During the six-month exclusive, Revenge Songs will be
the subject of an extensive promotional campaign as part of Barnes & Noble’s
Discover Great New Music program.
Released in the UK in late ’07 to acclaim
and excitement, Revenge Songs is an intimate, honest and
dreamy account of the disappointment, the heartbreak and finally,
the resilience in the aftermath of a break up. Golden reveals that
the driving force of his music is his attempt to rise above his
circumstances. “I know Revenge sounds like a negative concept,” he
says, “but for me it represents the idea of accepting your
inner struggle, standing tall in the face of doubt and failure.” Sacramento-
born Golden wrote most of the songs on the album after he moved
to Portland to do a regular job. Following spells hustling his
wares in LA and London, he had turned his back on the compulsion
to make music that’s been with him since he started singing
at the age of 10. “I was getting hung up on the career thing.
The distance and perspective of Portland was an inspiration, and
it made me realize that a musician is what I naturally am.” He
seldom bothers with recording studios, preferring, when he’s
away from home, the natural acoustics of underground car parks
and a particular subterranean concrete art gallery. “I love
the idea of making modern field recordings.”
Track Listing:
- Out Come The Wolves
- Pretend
- On A Saturday
- I’m Your Man
- Church Of New Song
- Shine A Light
- Revenge Songs
- Shoulders
- Love You
- Hold Your Hair Back
- Zero Integrity
Be sure to catch Jacob on his US tour in the early
spring- tour dates to be announced soon.
www.jacobgolden.com and www.myspace.com/themusicofjacobgolden
For more info on Jacob Golden contact:
Sarah Takenaga at Big Hassle
Media.
212-619-1360 /
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