Every
once in a while an album comes
out of nowhere
and finds you and knocks you
over the head with its poignancy.
It’s unfortunate that
this happens so rarely, but
there’s a damn good chance
it will when you listen to Winechuggers’
new record Grand Rapids for
the first time.
Winechuggers
is the project headed up by
William Cameron, a songwriter
who catalogs various human foibles
-- from obsessive love to angst
to the inability to settle down
in one place very long -- and
then chisels out an unusual
melody to sing along with. In
an (indie) world where most
musicians craft their songs
to fit snugly into categories,
Cameron follows his heart, slowing
things down when detailing a
walk in the rain in Pittsburgh
(“Jimmy Beaumont’s
Blues”) or going all synthesized
and psychedelic while making
up a story about lost Beatles
photographs (“Sixth Beatle,”
possibly the only song ever
to feature a line about a guy
who plays bass for the Silver
Jews). He’s equally likable
when he goes up-tempo; on the
driving “Long Circuitous
Path,” Cameron’s
slacker drawl pairs with a perky
piano figure and bouncy rhythm,
sounding something like Beck
fronting Wilco.
Winechuggers
may seem to have popped up out
of nowhere, but Cameron’s
got a history. He started the
project while living in Chicago,
a side gig and change-up from
his electronic duo Emperor Penguin,
in which he played keyboards
under the pseudonym Melvoin
Stanke. Moving between Chicago
and his hometown near Indianapolis,
he began recording what would
become Grand Rapids with friends
Jeb Banner and his Emperor Penguin
mate Carl Saff, finishing up
most of the album by 2001. After
a half-hearted attempt to get
the disc put out, he packed
the recordings in a box and
moved to San Francisco, where
he now lives. Last year, a copy
found its way to the Arena Rock
Recording Company offices in
Portland, and the label is now
bringing us what would’ve
been something of a lost classic.
Though it’s
four years old, the songs sound
remarkably fresh. Standout moments
include the album’s sole
electronic track, “Rock
and Roll Ambulance,” which
features Cameron moaning “I
didn’t think I would make
it” over a loping melody
played on a vintage Italian
organ (the Bontempi Mirage,
for the gearheads out there)
and a tearjerker cover of Split
Enz’s “Six Months
In a Leaky Boat.” The
Winechuggers version recasts
the 80s pop semi-hit as a melancholy
folk-pop number that better
serves its heartfelt message
about love gone wrong.
If that’s
not enough, Cameron throws in
a few acoustic tracks that will
remind some of Elliott Smith
with a slightly sunnier disposition.
It all adds up to an album that
belongs in heavy rotation for
anyone with a romantic side,
an album that’ll stick
with you long after you’ve
shut off the stereo, pushed
the pause button on your iPod,
or logged off your computer.
Sit back and take a swig along
with Winechuggers. |