SOUNDTRACK: MARTHA WAINWRIGHT-Live at the 9:30 Club (2006).
This show had Martha Wainwright opening for Neko Case (a nice bunch of Canadians, eh?) I’m not sure if the set is truncated or not (she claims to be hungover) but it’s only 30 minutes. I guess that’s not terribly short for an opening act, but it seems on the brief side–although it is 9 songs.
Martha is a bit cranky as the set opens, (or maybe that’s just her speaking voice) but she kind of warms up and is a funny chatterer. Seven of the songs come from her debut self-titled full length (which I don’t own). One song is new (“So Many Friends” which appears on I Know You’re Married…) and one comes from an EP (“New York, New York, New York”).
Martha has a unique voice that I find hard to describe. It can easily polarize listeners–some will find it way too exotic. It comes as a special surprise after she has just bantered with the audience in her low gravelly voice when it busts out with her higher (perhaps nasally) voice. I think once you get used to her voice it brings a special resonance to the lyrics.
She is also not afraid of the four letter word. The final song, crowd favorite “Bloody Mother Fucking Asshole” is just one of the obscene things that she sings here. The funny thing is that she never sounds angry when she’s singing these lines. He voice is charming (and yes odd) but never angry. It’s a weird mix, but one that I like.
This is a good introduction to her music (and Neko Case on the same page).
[READ: March 18, 2011] “The Smell of Smoke”
Unlike “What He Saw” which was erotically charged but hard to believe, this Walrus story–which is even more erotically charged and, on the surface utterly unlikely–was easier to believe as a story.
Green is a fourteen year old boy. Maggie is his twenty-one year old neighbor. As happens in a story like this, she seduces him. And they spend most of the summer having crazy sex. This all seems really unlikely, but I’ll throw in the detail that it’s 1968 and her parents are away quite a lot (which also seemed to happen a lot then).
The story is told in third person from Green’ point of view. And, despite the horny teenage fantasy story that this really is, the writing is tender and sweet and fairly believable.
For me the nice thing about the story was that although it eventually had to end, it never ended because they got caught or had any kind of scandal. Rather, she went off to college. But it doesn’t just end there.
Shortly after Maggie leaves, Green’s father takes him on a long car trip. A ritual. They go out in search of coal for their heater. It’s a long drive to the middle of nowhere, and it’s clear that Green’s father is looking to bond (or whatever they called it in 1968). And it’s clear that he wants to talk about the birds and the bees (Green does his best dutiful son face throughout).
After the explicitness of the beginning of the story, the ending comes across as sweet and touching. Behrens really pulls out a lot of good stuff in this short story.

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