SOUNDTRACK: FIREWATER-Performance from KEXP, July 3, 2008 (2008).
I loved Firewater when their first two albums came out and I even saw them once open for Letters for Cleo (a great show by both bands). Then I more or less lost touch with them. And it turns out that lead Firewater dude Tod A. had been out of the country for a while.
The interview (and concert) with them details his distaste for the Bush administration and his decision to get the hell out of the country for a while. So he spent three years traveling around India, Turkey, Pakistan and then returned with this album. I wasn’t aware of any of that, or even that they had a new album out in 2008.
Firewater had a very cool (and reasonably original) sound when they came out back in 1996. They had a middle eastern vibe even back then which they blended nicely with theatrical pomp and a whole lot of punk. They threw everything together into a rollicking good time (even if the lyrics were very dark indeed).
The 2008 album The Golden Hour seems a bit more upbeat (touring the world did him good) although it hasn’t changed the overall style of the music. This live set includes several new musicians for Firewater, and their array of skills (and instruments) is great. But the most surprising thing to me is how friendly and jovial Tod A. is. As I said, I knew the band as being kind of angry, so hearing him be fun (and inviting the KEXP volunteers to sing gloriously chaotic backing vocals on “Beirut”) is really cool.
In total the band does four songs: “Hey Clown,” “Electric City,” “6:45,” and “Borneo.” I think the biggest surprise for me is how short the songs are. Not punk short, but more like pop song length. And super catchy as well.
It’s a welcome return to a great band. Although I see they haven’t released anything else since 2008.
[READ: April 4, 2011] “The Principles of Exile”
This was a fascinating and very sad story which had multiple layers and went in many unexpected directions. It was really great.
As the story opens, Manny is sent to get some “special” cheese from a shop. The cheese is called halloumi, and the best kind is made in a bucket behind their counter. He is sent for this cheese because his mother is making a special dinner.
The dinner is in honor of Monsieur Sarkis’s new book. There was a fatwa leveled against Sarkis for his previous book. And that previous book (naturally) went on to be a best seller. Well, Manny’s father had the publishing rights to the book (normally his publishing house was on the verge of bankruptcy, so a huge best seller was a big deal for them). They didn’t even mind the fatwa.
Until it started to affect them personally.
When Manny’s life was threatened, his father and mother shipped him from their Paris home to the outback in Australia. He didn’t speak a word and was immediately seen as an outcast.
The story switches between Manny’s memories of his tortured life in Australia and the present day where Manny is still trying to cope with life returning to normal, where there are women who don’t torment him and where one woman in particular really seems to understand him. She also teaches him that he wasn’t alone in fatwa-induced exile.
The emotional lows are harrowing and the actual plot of the story Sarkis’ arrival, is dealt with wonderfully. This is a great story.

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