Oh, baby, mother me

Written by

Sunset Rubdown – Us Ones in Between (KEXP)

It’s Mother’s Day. The family is out at an expensive Chinese restaurant with a view overlooking the ocean. The fish could practically flop out of the water and into the tanks. The banner along the wall has an English translation underneath which reads: “A Good Place for your Daily Meals and Gathering!”

As each course comes, the two oldest sons, sitting nearest the parents, harry to serve the couple, often reaching over others and generally making a show of their devotion.

Between the arrival of courses, the older brother returns to his own plate, devouring any morsels on it with alacrity. He dismisses his bowl of rice with a wave and concentrates on seafood exclusively, shoveling mouthfuls in and swallowing dangerously quickly. His broad, dumb face concentrates only on the food in front of him, ignoring the conversation swirling around him. Eventually, he will run his father’s powerful and lucrative company into the ground, but for now he’s still blissfully learning the ropes as the Little Boss.

The middle brother spends most of the evening making puns about the flutist and the exhalation of air, gregariously heading up the conversation, his voice perpetually at a volume noticeably too loud for a roofed area. In a handful of months he’ll move back to America to earn a liberal arts degree and delve into a world up drama, art, music, and culture which his family and, frankly, most of his friends don’t really understand. He thinks of himself, despite his personable demeanor, as something of a misunderstood artist. He just hasn’t found his medium yet, or so he tells himself.

The mother wanders off to greet friends (she knows nearly everyone in the restaurant, including the owner) and pick new dishes out as they swim in tanks. She’s generous to a fault. The loudness of the conversation, surely traceable to the mother’s shout-talking, can’t drown out a softness, an unmistakable truly-cares-about-others quality which she has bequeathed her sons.

The youngest brother notes one of her returns and rejoins an easy, joking conversation in English. He’s well adjusted and relaxed. Once, on a long drive, his father was lecturing him on morals. Noting that his son was tuning him out, the father angrily inserted, “Listen, you can ignore me all you want when you’re 18. For now you have to listen to me.” The youngest son pointed out that he was, in fact, 18. “Well, ignore me then,” the father allowed, so the son did. A year later, during a disagreement over dinner at which there was beer, the father shouted, “First of all, you shouldn’t even be drinking yet, you’re not 18.” “I’m 19, dad.” “Don’t contradict me!”

Now, the youngest son estimates that, if asked, his dad will give his age as “16, nearly 17.” He holds no grudges, seems to almost enjoy the humor of the tale. None of the sons resent their father – he gave them everything they have and, besides, he’s their father.

The father is a ruthless business man; a ruthless man even, subject more to his own notions of honor and ritual than to any logical progression. He finishes the huge meal which will eventually cost him three-fourths of what he pays for rent and leans back, surveying his full family. He is fat and happy.

[Buy yer ma an e-card. Maybe don’t get her Shut Up I Am Dreaming if she’s not into the Rock Music, but grab a copy or two for yourself. Keep in mind, however, that Spencer Krug’s mom likes the Rock Music and is therefore probably cooler than your mom.]

Atheists and charlatans and communists and lesbians

Written by

This is how we do it!

Written by

The title to be sung a little something like this. “I’m kind of buzzed and it’s all because… this is how we do it!”

I can’t kick the habit

Written by

Will you please explain…

Written by

The Beatles – Come Together

I smell the hot and sticky petrichor this morning, one in which you are most certainly in love, Sir. There are whispers of reciprocation in the same air and that is surely a splendid thing. It sates my hope for legitimacy.

Or has dulled the tease of a stronger story. I’m unsure.

Sir, do you smell that same air or is yours of a fresher make? Mine is a beauty I envision. I wonder if yours is a famous painting. I hope it brings you slender ease to know you’re in on this trick. It must make the walk and the uniting cameras uncomplicated. We’re going to critique how you look at her. I hope you won’t mind. How do the apples of your garden taste? I bet they taste sweet with a hint of ironic bitter. I bet they taste better than ours and our paltry lot.

In the offing, they salute you. They come together and pay for your garden with such ease – they and their modern day offering. Sir, your garden is splendid. It is made of the many working hards now clapping.

“Come together right now over me.”

[Give it up for the…]

I wanna do right by you

Written by

Jimmy Eat World – Get It Faster

They rode.

First by jeep. The 24-year-old girl they’d commissioned to act as guide piloted the machine, heading out into the endless Mongolian desert. There were no roads. Just directions. The guide seemed to know which direction would end up somewhere.

With no landmarks, no hills, no foliage, they could see the gers, like mini habitable silos, for hours before they eventually came close enough to get out. Just miles (or was it kilometers, G. thought, or does it even matter when measurements mean nothing and the numbers are infinite?) of watching the ger get slightly bigger on the horizon.

Don’t knock. That’s rude. Just pop your head in the little flap, smile, and give a little wave. The family will already have begun tea for you.

On the third day they came across a van. The front axle had broken, the windshield shattered, front end sunk low into the sand like a bad overbite. Wordlessly they pulled out a blanket. Everyone placed what food and drink they had out on the blanket and began the picnic. Dried goat from a jar, rancid mare’s milk, some tea. R. offered a bottle of vodka from his backpack and faces lit up. It was high noon.

They drove one of the stranded van’s passengers to the nearest hut, where a motorbike carried him to a city.

R. and G. and the guide – they rode.

At the last ger of the day, a 14-year-old boy and his 17-year-old sister lived alone. Well, as alone as you can be with 2,000 sheep and hundreds of horses. Horses outnumber humans 13-1 in Mongolia. The father had taken the mother to the city’s hospital, and the boy and girl herded alone. No matter, they’d begun the tea.

In the tent pitched next to the teenagers’ ger R. and G. laid down. G. felt his thigh under the covers. It had been a while. “C’mon,” she said.
He rolled over.
“Tomorrow,” he murmured, “we ride.”

On horseback this time. The jeep could not handle the mountain ranges.

Up and through and over and down they galloped and clopped and stumbled and lurched. For two days. The summer desert warmth gave way to a chill.

“Can we stop?” G. asked. “I want to put on my jacket.”
“No,” said the guide. Then, thinking about it, “No.”

Through valleys and around mountains and toward an isolated people hardly anyone in the civilized world had ever met, only a few dozen remaining. Mongolia’s drop in total fertility rate is the steepest out of any country in the world.

“Can we stop now?” G. asked, shivering in her short-sleeved shirt.
“No,” said the guide. Then, thinking, “Okay.” She handed G. the bottle of vodka without dismounting. “Drink.” G. took a swig.

“Now,” the guide said, putting the bottle back in her pack, “we ride.”

[Bleed Mongolian.]

Look beneath the floorboards

Written by

Sufjan Stevens – John Wayne Gacy, Jr.

In a passing conversation about Sufjan, my friend compared his music to a clumsy dinner: the salad is dripping with vinegar, it runs into the mashed potatoes and the chunks of beef, their marinade so appetising on their lonesome, are soaked dry and rough, hardened. It is a good dinner, a fulfilling one, but there is too much going on. It’s hard to know what you like and what you don’t.

In “John Wayne Gacy, Jr.” Sufjan gets it right. It is simple. Is the twinkling piano even manned, is there somebody there, their fingers deftly moved by wrists? Are they thinking? “His father was a drinker,” Sufjan begins, “and his mother cried in bed.” Is this happening in a vacuum? John, far removed from the perils of adulthood, of aging, slips on the swing and it hangs, like a judge’s gavel in the air, still-framed, ready to come down.

When Sufjan’s falsetto, scratching at the floor with the soft wraiths of piano heard rattling against the window, cries, oh my God, are you crying?

[Buy Illinoise.]

I’ll end up winning

Written by

The National – Karen

References to a woman named Karen wind their way through The National’s catalogue, most notably in Alligator. She shows up in “Karen” (obviously), but also “City Middle” (“Karen, take me to the nearest famous city middle / where they hang the lights”) and “Looking for Astronauts” (“You know you have a permanent piece / of my medium-sized American heart”), a song whose title is a phrase she uttered.

The woman in question is Carin Besser, lead singer Matt Berninger’s then girlfriend, now wife. The former The New Yorker fiction editor contributed lyrics to “Brainy, “Ada,” and “Gospel” on 2007’s Boxer, but two years prior, she was serving as an inspiration rather than a named co-conspirator. (While she doesn’t make an appearance in the liner notes until the band’s fourth studio album, she deserves credit for influencing her future husband sooner. The poet’s appreciation for words prompted Beringer’s lyrical improvement — better vocabulary, stronger imagery, deeper metaphors — between Sad Songs For Dirty Lovers and Alligator.)

Like so many modern couples, the pair broke up, reunited, and repeated the process before finally figuring out they should be together. Today, they live a near perfect existence. They are filled with love or whatever you call it. They drink wine with their friends while enjoying singalongs in dungeons in the south of France. Now, their young child inspires songs (High Violet‘s “Afraid of Everybody.”).

The only difference between us and them is a couple hundred thousand people purchased their story. But basically, they seem like a happy, fulfilled couple. Still, do you think Carin ever turns to her husband, smiles and says, “Hey Matt, you spelled my name wrong. Fuck you. And make me a drink.” [Buy Alligator.]

RISE IF YOU’RE SLEEPING STAY AWAKE

Written by

The Mountain Goats – High Hawk Season

I shower with the door open, the loud speaker hum accompanied by the patter of water on tile, whistling as I scrub.

[Spray our dreams on any surface where the paint will stick.]

The middle of a lovesick lullaby

Written by