SOUNDTRACK: WEEPING TILE-eePee (1995).
Canadian singer Sarah Harmer was originally in the band Weeping Tile. As far as I knew, they had only released this cleverly titled EP. Further research at Sarah’s site proves this to be incorrect. They released two albums and this EP, all of which are available at her site (and elsewhere). There’s also mention of something called Secret Sessions although there is no evidence of its physical existence on the net.
So this EP is 7 tracks and features two songs that were recorded later on Sarah’s solo discs.
The opener, “Anyone” opens with a nice R.E.M. type guitar sound, but jumps into an uptempo alt rocker. It’s a very satisfying opening and seems like it should have been a hit. Interestingly, the next song, “Basement Apt” was a hit…six years later on Sarah’s solo disc. This version is rawer and feels slower even though it is the same overall length. The big difference is that Sarah’s solo version has a louder and faster drum track that really makes the song fly. This version feels more aching though.
“Dogs and Thunder” introduces a more country sound (folk guitar and strings) that Harmer would experiment with off and on for years. It’s followed by a great cover of Neil Young’s “Don’t Let It Bring You Down.”
Another highlight is “Westray” a very stark almost a capella track which highlights Sarah’s raw voice. It’s very affecting. And the disc concludes with “King Lion,” a great song that is back to guitar basics. The chorus is wonderfully catchy.
This is a great EP from a short-lived Canadian band. Sarah Harmer has always had great songwriting chops and it’s fun to hear her in her more youthful rock version here.
[READ: January 11, 2011] “Hard Currency”
This is one of the longest stories in The Walrus that I can remember. It’s set in Russia and concerns Alexei, a Russian writer who now lives in America. He has had great success internationally (and won a Pulitzer) for his novels, all of which were set in Russia.
And yet, for all of his connections to his motherland, he doesn’t really like Russia very much. He has been back there several times but he is never treated with respect. In fact, he is never even treated as a Russian–despite his birth, people look at him and know that he’s not a Russian anymore.
The plot of the story is about prostitutes. [I am pretty surprised at the proliferation of prostitutes in stories…do authors frequent prostitutes more than other people?]. When the story opens, we learn that Alexei’s very first sexual experience was with a prostitute. And now, twenty-eight years later, after much success and a failed marriage, he has returned to Russia and has called upon another prostitute.
This trip to Russia is intended to be his last. He wants to visit his grandmother’s house one last time so he can complete her biography–his last, and most personal book. But now that he’s back he can’t bring himself to go there. And on his last night in Russia, he calls the prostitute who is not only not impressed with him, she is straightforward about simply reaching into his wallet to extract more rubles.
When Alexei finally gets the drunken courage to go though with his plans, it is two in the morning. Naturally nothing goes as he expected (when does drunk dialing ever work?) but the ending is certainly a shock to his system (and probably enough for a future book).
I enjoyed the story. I was a little put off by the prostitute. I think it’s really hard to write a convincing prostitute character–they’re sort of a writer’s crutch. I was worried she’d turn into the “hooker with a heart of gold” but it doesn’t go that route at all. It revels in frustration but concludes with a darkly comic scene that was rather enjoyable.
I think The Walrus is well served by longer fiction.

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