If it sounds country, then that's what it is, you know — its a country song. – Kris Kristofferson

Throwback Thursday – Old 97’s – Too Far To Care

Posted on | October 8, 2009 | 1 Comment

1. The Old 97’s have a serious claim to the title of the world’s best bar band. Luckily for them, they built their furious live act on the strength of Rhett Miller and Murry Hammond’s songwriting, a foundation not easily shaken. Coming out of Dallas in the early 1990’s, their first major release (and soon to be re-released on vinyl) Wreck Your Life contained chestnuts such as “Victoria”, who “started out on Percodan and ended up with me”, and the charming ‘Big Brown Eyes”. However, the band dedicated to making music “that sounded like Johnny Cash” really hit a stride with their second album, 1997’s Too Far to Care. Brash, rough around the edges, and busting at the seams with Miller’s heart-on-sleeve wit, this record sums up the mid-90’s era of “insurgent country” and set the blueprint for a fine career.

2. Opening with “Timebomb”, a song that would forever close their shows, Ken Bethea’s ragged reveille lurches into Philip Peeples’ narcotic train beat that defines so much of the 97’s sound. Along with Miller’s lyrics of obsession with a “stick-legged girl” and Hammond’s high lonesome background vocals, “Timebomb” showcases what every member of the band does best, while capturing the furious energy of their live show to tape. Some fans might consider this too punk to be country, but there is plenty of twang left on the album for the punk fans to wonder if it is in fact too country for their taste.

3. “Barrier Reef” shows off a 97’s secret — the second song. From “Nineteen” to “Rollerskate Skinny” to “Dance With Me” off their latest, the 97’s have a thing for placing an uptempo change of pace in the second slot. This trick gives the record some movement and enough variety to keep things interesting, as Miller weaves a swaggering, gonzo tale about a “serial ladykiller” who can’t even enjoy a wild night with a tough conquest. His mournful plea to the hard-hearted “Salome” bumps right up against Hammond’s “West Texas Teardrops”, both songs about heartbreak, but on opposite ends of the 97’s musical spectrum. The wild “Melt Show” takes a near-punk approach to Miller’s endless sense of wonder about love, which continues in “Streets of Where I’m From”, where he remarks that said streets are “paved with hearts instead of gold”. Smart enough to re-record a winner from Wreck Your Life, the redux of “Big Brown Eyes” sounds better and rocks harder than the original, amplifying Miller’s desperation that has him “calling time and temperature just for some company”.

4. The thundering closer “Four Leaf Clover” brings in Exene Cervenka of X, who duets with Miller as he hits rock-bottom. Cervenka’s presence is a nod to the other half of the 97’s sound, which draws directly from the southern California punk scene of the 1980’s. Though on later records the 97’s would go with different musical approaches, they laid the bedrock for what they do with Too Far To Care. Bringing together the heartbreak of classic country and the longing, restless energy of youth, the punkish, twangy sound they create is the perfect environment for Miller’s woeful tales of love and the complete lack of it.

Old 97’s – Barrier Reef

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Comments

One Response to “Throwback Thursday – Old 97’s – Too Far To Care

  1. Aimz
    November 17th, 2009 @ 2:08 pm

    Great post. One of my top five albums of all time.

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