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Denton TX combo Starhead call what they do "ya'll-ternative", I have to give them credit for that. First because of the chutzpah of embracing both indie rock and country music and, secondly, for being able to pull this off.
Singer Ira Wile knows that at the core of both country and rock music is the foundation of good storytelling. And that's what "Escadrille" contains, a series of short stories set to reserved, precisely played music. The tone of these stories matches the late afternoon light striking small, dusty towns. The sort of light that highlights mistakes and makes things seem both hyper-real and painfully nostalgic.
This is a recording steeped in longing, melancholia and slowly sipped hard liquor. It's powerfull stuff that eases into you and worms its way into your head.
The music goes hand-in-hand with the storytelling style. The feeling here is laid back, almost laconic but that just makes it more seductive. It's as if the band knows they have all the time in the world to woo you, so why bother rushing? Wile's vocals go well with the approach, his voice is yearning but never strained... more than occasionally recalling the solo work of The Replacements' Chris Mars.
The country color of the music works well in evoking the somber mood the band is going for and lends an air of american mythology to the whole affair. It infuses these songs with that understated heroism of western films, that every (sad) man triumphant myth that we all want to seem a part of.
What sets Starhead separate from other bands mixing country and indie may just be the trumpet work of James Kerr. By turns he comments on the stories and lifts us above them, like the supernatural element lurking just out of reach in a ghost story. On the songs "Coda" and "Behind the Walls of You" this strange mix of loss and horns brings to mind the idea that this is what the soundtrack to "Blade Runner" would have sounded like if it had been composed by Ennio Morricone.
Quite nice overall.
Starhead:
http://www.myspace.com/starheadtx

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