January 21 - Chinese Rifle Song
There's an interesting strolling pace to this song that put me in mind of some banjo folk I've heard, which might be why this song felt like it was in
There's an interesting strolling pace to this song that put me in mind of some banjo folk I've heard, which might be why this song felt like it was in a country-and-blues-adjacent space. The repeated refrain of laying out on the patio gave this a musical shape that felt a
January 20 - Quetzacoatl Comes Through
So the first thing to observe about this song is that the thing uploaded to Youtube under its name isn't this song but rather a superbly 80s weird little synth
So the first thing to observe about this song is that the thing uploaded to Youtube under its name isn't this song but rather a superbly 80s weird little synth keyboards things. It's quite nice in its own way and very much fits into the idea of This Year being
January 19 - Thanks For The Dress
Cheeky start there, John, burst of radio channels ending with "please keep feeding us". Very sound collage. Hot Garden Stomp continues to feel like one of the earlier places where
Cheeky start there, John, burst of radio channels ending with "please keep feeding us". Very sound collage. Hot Garden Stomp continues to feel like one of the earlier places where John was saying "all right, so this is what I sound like, but what if I didn't?", The guitar is
January 18 - Going To Japan
A frantic and uncertain start to a sing that grows into its confidence even as the whirlwind of ifs lyrics grows in speed. This is a sketch, but it's a
A frantic and uncertain start to a sing that grows into its confidence even as the whirlwind of ifs lyrics grows in speed. This is a sketch, but it's a sketch that feels like it covers ground that later John would either move away from or come back to from
January 17 - Billy The Kid's Dream of the Magic Shoes
There are many archetypes of a Mountain Goats song, but one of my favourite ones is a cheerful ditty about death. This is a short bouncy number with a lot
There are many archetypes of a Mountain Goats song, but one of my favourite ones is a cheerful ditty about death. This is a short bouncy number with a lot of lyrical repetition, about a guy facing his end with sanguinity because of his special shoes. As such it's a
January 16 - Fresh Cherries In Trinidad
Castio-tastic start to this, but a delightful narrative vignette. A tiny sweet moment, as sweet as a fresh cherry. And that's almost it. Not every song has an important point
Castio-tastic start to this, but a delightful narrative vignette. A tiny sweet moment, as sweet as a fresh cherry. And that's almost it. Not every song has an important point or a poignant moral, some are just small patches of brightness in a dark world. You wake up and someone
January 15 - Song for Mark and Joel
This song is a series of fraying loops. A chaotic, rolling guitar rhythm, the fuzz of the cassette recorder mixing with the fuzz of the acoustic guitar mixing with the
This song is a series of fraying loops. A chaotic, rolling guitar rhythm, the fuzz of the cassette recorder mixing with the fuzz of the acoustic guitar mixing with the repeated lyrical refrains that pointed to a life that went on and on, almost the same each time. Trouble coming
January 14 - Going To Norwalk
This is a vignette with a ghost in it, a delightful and time honoured musical tradition. A slice from John's life from which he has removed himself and added another.
This is a vignette with a ghost in it, a delightful and time honoured musical tradition. A slice from John's life from which he has removed himself and added another. Musically this is about as simple as most of the early Mountain Goats material: a repeating refrain over which a
January 13 - The Last Day Of Jimi Hendix's Life
A gentle song to start with, this begins in what the cruel might call banality but which I think of as melancholy comfort. The small moments in a majestic life
A gentle song to start with, this begins in what the cruel might call banality but which I think of as melancholy comfort. The small moments in a majestic life before it knows it's over. Like (let's face it) most people listening to Hendrix, I came to him after the
January 12 - Song For Cleomenes
oh, I love the riff for this, the slow descending chaotic catastrophic roll of guitar with spoken words over the top. And what words. Easy to listen to, steady in
oh, I love the riff for this, the slow descending chaotic catastrophic roll of guitar with spoken words over the top. And what words. Easy to listen to, steady in pace, but setting a scene of impending pain and disaster. John's love for the vast period we think of as
January 11 - New Star Song
There's something about John's simple, narrative, confessional songs that really strike home the most. The ones where the words are in a sense very straightforward and in another crackling with
There's something about John's simple, narrative, confessional songs that really strike home the most. The ones where the words are in a sense very straightforward and in another crackling with imagery and meaning. I can see the narrator of New Star Song with the same clarity that I see the
January 10 - Seeing Daylight
...wow, this feels like a time jump. We're still with the rumbling of John's tape recorder, but everything from the vocals to the instrumentation to the lyrics feels almost infinitely
...wow, this feels like a time jump. We're still with the rumbling of John's tape recorder, but everything from the vocals to the instrumentation to the lyrics feels almost infinitely more modern despite only being three years after the previous song. Which isn't or shouldn't be surprising. The gap from
January 9 - Solomon Revisited Revisited
Time for an odd thing to say: this is one of the most consciously "songy" of the songs so far. The repeated refrain of "I've got a radio" and the
Time for an odd thing to say: this is one of the most consciously "songy" of the songs so far. The repeated refrain of "I've got a radio" and the tight but coherent narrative break it away from the "sung poetry" of a lot of the cassette tape songs. There's
January 8 - Ice Cream, Cobra Man
After two days of experimentation we return to something more foundational and closer to John's poetic and folk-inflected roots. The music here is a lyric transmission system and the recording
After two days of experimentation we return to something more foundational and closer to John's poetic and folk-inflected roots. The music here is a lyric transmission system and the recording is delightfully rough, ending with an "umm..." and a rush of wind on a cheap built in microphone. This is
January 7 - Pure Milk
Sometimes when you're listening to early material by an artist you can catch the moment that they "get it". Not when they become successful, but a point some distance before
Sometimes when you're listening to early material by an artist you can catch the moment that they "get it". Not when they become successful, but a point some distance before that where they first do something that sounds like them. There's a point in pre-Discworld Terry Pratchett's novel The Dark
January 6 - The Cow Song
In one sense, this was the song so far in this year (and in This Year) which sounded least like The Mountain Goats. Which made it the song that sounded
In one sense, this was the song so far in this year (and in This Year) which sounded least like The Mountain Goats. Which made it the song that sounded the most like The Mountain Goats. Coming to the band more than thirty years into their career it's easy to
January 5 - Going To Alaska
I remember a quiet joy when I was first learning to play the guitar, of working out things that I considered to be "cheats". I was never a good guitarist,
I remember a quiet joy when I was first learning to play the guitar, of working out things that I considered to be "cheats". I was never a good guitarist, but one reason guitar is such a popular instrument is that the level of good you have to be before
January 4 - One Winter At Point Alpha Privative
The early songs of John Darnielle are like brilliant notes on index cards. Actually, not index cards. Receipts, bank deposit slips, Chinese food menus. They're urgent thoughts that spit an
The early songs of John Darnielle are like brilliant notes on index cards. Actually, not index cards. Receipts, bank deposit slips, Chinese food menus. They're urgent thoughts that spit an idea out as it's still forming, and they're all the better for that. if you want a record of exactly
January 3 - Wild Palm City / Within You, Without You
So this is an interesting one. It comes from a compilation called "Back to the Egg, Asshole" which appears to be a multi artist mixtape where all the songs have
So this is an interesting one. It comes from a compilation called "Back to the Egg, Asshole" which appears to be a multi artist mixtape where all the songs have the same names as Beatles songs, described as "An unplugged anti-tribute to Paul McCartney" that features no Paul McCartney songs.
January 2 - Running Away With What Freud Said
Wow, this is early. A song from the first Mountain Goats cassette. In fact, the first song from that first cassette. It couldn't be more simple in terms of the
Wow, this is early. A song from the first Mountain Goats cassette. In fact, the first song from that first cassette. It couldn't be more simple in terms of the looping rhythm, and at one minute thirty four it's very much more an immediate thought than a fleshed out idea,