SOUNDTRACK: SISKIYOU-Keep Away the Dead [CST083] (2011).
I really enjoyed Siskiyou’s first album. This album updates the sound and makes it a bit bigger. And yet somehow the album still sounds fragile.
The album is full of songs that are catchy, but not really easy on the ear.
The first song reminds me of Arcade Fire. Something about the ringing guitar and crescendos. But the recording feels more like a demo, much more intimate that Arcade Fire. “Where Does That Leave Me” is an even more spare number, just vocals and guitar although it slowly builds. “Twigs and Stones” is the first song that sounds like the bulk of the album—where Colin Huebert’s vocals really come to the fore. His vocal style is loud and verging on the whiny (again, like Arcade Fire). This song also has a lot of other instruments that percolate to the top—reminding me of older Mercury Rev.
“Revolution Blues” is the standout track for me, it’s incredibly catchy (and fun to try to sing in his eccentric voice). The accordion and the minor key intensity is really powerful. I guess it’s a shame that it was written by Neil Young, then (although the Siskiyou version is much better). “Dear Old Friend” is a more country sound (which for me is shorthand for slide guitars), but it keeps the same style and feel as the other songs. “Fiery Death” is the first song where percussion makes itself known very loudly. It’s a cool introduction of loud thumping. “Sing Me to Sleep” is a 2 minute lullaby and “Dead Right Now” is a 2 minute coda that ends the album nicely.
The disc is short (about 30 minutes) but a lot of emotion and craft is packed into it. It’s really enjoyable.
[READ: May 24, 2012] “Sweet Dreams”
I’m always disconcerted when a story is in English but is set in another country. Well, that’s not exactly right. When it seems like it’s set in another country because the author is from that other country and he or she is writing about that other country without specifying it (usually because it is translated). It’s very Amerocentric, but perhaps everyone thinks a story is set in their town unless told otherwise. So I didn’t realize that this story was originally written in German (it was translated by Michael Hoffman), but it felt like it was taking place in Europe. I actually guessed France, until later on it was revealed to be Switzerland.
There’s something cool about stories that are written elsewhere, especially if you don’t know the place well, it allows for almost anything to happen. A couple riding a bus in Europe doesn’t mean the same thing as a couple riding a bus in, say Tallahassee. But having set up that distinction, this story is about love. And love is universal.
The story is written from the point of view of Lara, a shy bank worker. She has been dating Simon for several months and they have recently moved in together. They should be in the first bloom of love—on their own for the first time (they never felt comfortable fooling around at their parents’ houses)—but her shyness in particular won’t loosen. She doesn’t like him to see her naked, and they are very reserved in their love-making. And from the start Stamm places a dark tone over the story. The get a place in the town that he likes but it’s pretty run down. He hadn’t brought much to the apartment, and he seems critical of some of her purchases. He even comments that “forever is a long time” when she says that the towels she bought will last forever. And then on the bus, a man, dressed in a long black coat stares at Lara over and over. It may be innocent, but it’s still disconcerting.
When they get home, she takes a bath (she won’t let him in the bathroom) and asks him to go to the restaurant downstairs to buy a bottle of wine. She finishes the bath and he’s not back yet, so she reads the paper. Which is full of more grim news. When she reads about a dead body found in the lake nearby and since we know she doesn’t feel comfortable about the restaurant downstairs, we know something bad has happened.
But of course it hasn’t. He is just helping out the landlady downstairs. And suddenly they windup having drinks in the pub rather than at home. But the fear that he wasn’t going to come back still pervades her.
Two interesting things happen as the story ends. In subtle ways it seems like Lara’s fears about Simon may be real (but it’s hard to tell). And even better, the man from the bus returns to the story.
The man’s business in the story is wonderful. I don’t want to give away why, but he impacts Lara in a way I never would have anticipated. And his story has a profound impact on how we read the story and how we think about what we just read. Wonderful.
Karen does a great unpacking of the story (with spoilers, be warned) and found some details that made it even better than I thought.

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