Dave Longstreth's underrated 2005 concept piece, "The Getty Address," used a fractured but soulful avant-gardism to realize a hilarious theme: Don Henley. His new LP, "Rise Again," tries to play Black Flag by memory. The result--more lovely and broken analog soul--charms again.
Following the 2006 EP New Attitude, Longstreth went to help his parents move out of the house he grew up in. Among his youthful artifacts was the cassette case from the Black Flag album Damaged. This brought back all sorts of memories - Black Flag was one of Longstreth's first loves - but the tape itself was missing. So, like the character in the Jorge Luis Borges story "Pierre Menard, Author of the Quixote" who sets out to recreate Don Quixote line by line from memory, Longstreth went to the nearest Guitar Center, purchased the cheapest cassette four-track he could find, and embarked on recasting Damaged from memory, without re-listening to a single note or reading any lyrics. The ten songs that make up Rise Above (titled after one of the tracks on Damaged) stem from these four-track demos, recorded at his parents house on an acoustic guitar. All that Jorge Luis Borges-inspired jive might just be hot wind if Rise Above weren't such a hell of a record on its own terms. It resounds with a kind of elegant simplicity: beautiful interlocking guitar parts, gorgeous three-part vocal harmonies, and some great songwriting. Chris Taylor of Grizzly Bear manned the knobs, giving Rise Above the same rich sound that he brought to his own band's acclaimed album Yellow House. Longstreth used the same musicians that appeared on the US tour on which he debuted these songs, and Rise Above captures the inventiveness and raw power of Dirty Projectors' live arrangements at long last. Over three full lengths, an EP, and five different live bands in four years, David Longstreth has created in Dirty Projectors a body of music of original and variegated beauty. The breadth of his talents as a songwriter, arranger, bandleader and singer call to mind Prince, Joni Mitchell, and Bjork. His constantly evolving sound - both live and on record - the sheer intensity of the music, and the originality of his voice set him apart. Among modern music makers, he is a maverick: a loner and a rebel. Dirty Projectors will tour non-stop in support of Rise Above, first performing throughout Europe, appearing at festivals, supporting Beirut and headlining. Following their European tour, they have a special one-off show at the Whitney Museum of American Art on July 20th and then in late August they will embark on a full North American tour with dates to be announced shortly.