Mountain Goat Darnielle Gets Autobiographical With 'Sunset Tree'
A recent column in the New Yorker that was mostly about the Mountain
Goats (the name under which singer/songwriter/musician John Darnielle records and tours) reverently discussed Darnielle's lyrics as some
of the most keen and intelligent to be found in contemporary
independently-released rock music. This is a fine assertion to make
the Mountain Goats have been pushing lyrical limits in
songwriting for years on albums that have been
adored and discussed (and even purchased on eBay for
exorbitant sums). Until now, though, Darnielle has generally eluded
two-page articles and photo shoots from Conde Nast
publications.
But The Sunset Tree (4AD) Darnielle's new Mountain Goats album (produced by John Vanderslice), treads
different territory, and perhaps it's opening up the
ears of critics and listeners who might be turned off
by narrative story-songs about ancient Greece or Aztec
gods. (Overheard at a recent Mountain Goats show in
Brooklyn, uttered slowly and pretentiously without a
hint of sarcasm: "My favorite Mountain Goats songs are
the ones about Aztec gods and overwhelming
heartbreak.")
For the first time, Darnielle is writing
fully about himself (last year's We Shall All Be
Healed was tangentially about his experiences with
drugs, friends, and drug-addicted friends). This new
foray into autobiographical territory could explain
why some people are perking up their musical (and
editorial) ears in ways they haven't, but certainly
should have, before.
Still, though better late than never. And for fans,
The Sunset Tree is a captivating glimpse at a life
tacitly avoided in Darnielle's songs for over a dozen
years. Darnielle, corresponding over email, explains
the rather lengthy wait:
"I waited to write these songs precisely because I
don't care to listen to somebody whose pain is still
fresh romanticizing his own situation," Darnielle
writes. "I'm not special, my situation isn't special,
it's quite common; I wanted to get enough years
between me and my situation to write honestly about
it."
Darnielle's stepfather, a "complex and eventually
tragic figure" (now deceased) features prominently in The Sunset
Tree, and the situation from which Darnielle felt the
need to separate himself was the abusive childhood he
suffered while living under the man's roof. The album covers
Darnielle's teenage years; around two decades later,
he figured enough time had passed.
"I don't think writing directly from pain is really
honest; I think pain distorts reality and magnifies
the ego," he writes. "All respect to people in pain,
of course! But who really wants to hear them cry?"
Darnielle, however, has spent his career writing songs
about and filling albums with characters in pain, so
he lends his own tale a familiar sensitivity. In We
Shall All Be Healed, Darnielle figured in the record
as a character on the periphery of that album's
tragedies; in The Sunset Tree he's right in the
thick of it, screaming and crying and remembering.
There are characters in the Mountain Goats' catalogue
who suffer the devastation and anxiety that befall
the young John Darnielle in this album, though he
insists that fiction is fiction, and none of his
earlier songs were a direct result of either his
childhood or a need to deal with it.
"I don't write songs when I'm in pain, nor play music
to feel good," Darnielle writes. "I'm sure plenty of
people do, and that's fine for them, but that notion
of art as purgative therapy for the artist isn't
very interesting to me. I wrote The Sunset Tree for
my younger self and the many people just like him who
are out there in the world right now, but it wasn't a
way of treating myself or anything."
Not surprisingly, the process was not easy for
Darnielle, whose blog during the recording of the
album mentioned emotional breakdowns and exhaustion.
"Sometimes the writing got really emotional, which was
weird for me. The stuff I wrote in Europe, much of
which didn't get recorded, kinda reduced me to a
blubbering wreck a couple of times," Darnielle writes.
Additionally, the new stress of writing in the first
person presented its own anxieties, doubts, and
debates. "When a guy with only himself to consult
writes auto-bio stuff, there's a high probability for
navel-gazelry," writes Darnielle, though he mentions
that friends like bassist Peter Hughes (who plays on the album and tours with
Darnielle) kept his more indulgent tendencies in line during the writing and
recording.
"The hard part about writing, for lack of a better
phrase, was keeping it real: for me; the typical
survivor's tale is a little too here's-the-hero
here's-the-villain, and I didn't want that. I didn't
want anybody to feel sorry for me."
Darnielle continues: "When I say that I used to just
tell stories, I think that's the truth; I don't think
that all my previous work was just a warm-up for
writing autobiographically, and in a way that's why I
wouldn't have wanted to do auto-bio stuff; there's
this presumption that telling stories is somehow less
'real' than writing about one's life. I reject that
idea. I don't think my life's mission is to talk about
my life; I just happened to start doing it lately to
see where it would lead me."
Whether or not he continues to follow this idea and
records a third record about his own experiences is
still to be determined, though judging by his
descriptions of the song subjects Darnielle's been
tackling recently, he'd have to be stepping into
pretty symbolic territory for the autobiographical
element to remain. "The mummy! Vampires! A
pterodactyl!" he writes, adding, "It's all rather
more emotional than it sounds." Neal Block [Wednesday, May 25, 2005]
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