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West Virginia Hitchhiker

from Little Patch Of Sky by Drift Mouth

/
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  • Record/Vinyl + Digital Album

    Full disclosure, as a writer, I've been writing about Lou Poster for years. But as a tireless songwriter, he makes it easy. His music has been the background for steely benders -- as Grafton -- and, perhaps late night, round a campfire, lost in the woods as a terrestrial troubadour. A storyteller that is always needed in your tribe. Drift Mouth is something that combines it all, but is completely out of body, at least for Poster.
    Poster is a guy who continues to surprise me. Yes, middle-age bears broken backs and heavy bones, but survivors can still conjure up those continued leaps of faith that came in youth. Case in point, Drift Mouth's latest album, Little Patch of Sky, and the lead blunt force of "Wake You Up." Anyone here in Columbus who may have stopped listening should reconcile. Anyone outside of our concrete-belt, stream it, or better yet, buy some physical proof of this song. It makes Son Volt sound trite, Jawbreaker a bit too boujee, and the Jayhawks stuffed with hokum -- in essence, there's authenticity that mixes prime '90s Albini-ed angles with Harry Smith in the holler. If you're from here you'd understand in an instant. Anyone outside of the concrete-belt, well, it'll sink in.
    Poster is a historian. Celebrating revivalism, keeping ghosts alive. His group follows a cadence towards a particular nostalgic seam that's dug in, barely there, and thus, vaguely remembered. Poster can do a gallant country gentleman as on "Porch Cat," -- soaked in the dark reflections of faded neon off of slick black tabletops -- in the honkey-tonk, or better, dives of Columbus that the players know all too well. Moments in time, quieted by snare hits and shots off the bar. If you enjoy it, you likely know the silence it elicits. He can do a roughhewn punk facade on "Straw Thief," but the layers and craft surrounding it are pure class, noble grit, magic realism.
    Along with long time friends and tenured veterans of the Columbus scene including Brad Swiniarski on drums, Mark Spurgeon on guitar, Eric Johnson on bass, and Regan Tonti on background vocals (a perfect foil to Poster's throat-clearing crank), Drift Mouth drive Poster's West Virginian narratives past mere acoustic recollections or passed-down traditionals. It would be remiss to exclude coal from this entire world, because it's the reason Poster's people still exist, if only in an ember. Fittingly, Little Patch of Sky, is about finding solace in the tatters of survival. You could plug in anything really -- the promise of gold, oil, ol' time religion, or .coms -- as Poster is confident in the fact that the American Dream is finite.
    -- Kevin J. Elliott. Columbus, OH. January, 2018.

    Includes unlimited streaming of Little Patch Of Sky via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
    ... more
    ships out within 3 days
    Purchasable with gift card

      $19.99 USD or more 

     

  • Compact Disc (CD) + Digital Album

    Full disclosure, as a writer, I've been writing about Lou Poster for years. But as a tireless songwriter, he makes it easy. His music has been the background for steely benders -- as Grafton -- and, perhaps late night, round a campfire, lost in the woods as a terrestrial troubadour. A storyteller that is always needed in your tribe. Drift Mouth is something that combines it all, but is completely out of body, at least for Poster.
    Poster is a guy who continues to surprise me. Yes, middle-age bears broken backs and heavy bones, but survivors can still conjure up those continued leaps of faith that came in youth. Case in point, Drift Mouth's latest album, Little Patch of Sky, and the lead blunt force of "Wake You Up." Anyone here in Columbus who may have stopped listening should reconcile. Anyone outside of our concrete-belt, stream it, or better yet, buy some physical proof of this song. It makes Son Volt sound trite, Jawbreaker a bit too boujee, and the Jayhawks stuffed with hokum -- in essence, there's authenticity that mixes prime '90s Albini-ed angles with Harry Smith in the holler. If you're from here you'd understand in an instant. Anyone outside of the concrete-belt, well, it'll sink in.
    Poster is a historian. Celebrating revivalism, keeping ghosts alive. His group follows a cadence towards a particular nostalgic seam that's dug in, barely there, and thus, vaguely remembered. Poster can do a gallant country gentleman as on "Porch Cat," -- soaked in the dark reflections of faded neon off of slick black tabletops -- in the honkey-tonk, or better, dives of Columbus that the players know all too well. Moments in time, quieted by snare hits and shots off the bar. If you enjoy it, you likely know the silence it elicits. He can do a roughhewn punk facade on "Straw Thief," but the layers and craft surrounding it are pure class, noble grit, magic realism.
    Along with long time friends and tenured veterans of the Columbus scene including Brad Swiniarski on drums, Mark Spurgeon on guitar, Eric Johnson on bass, and Regan Tonti on background vocals (a perfect foil to Poster's throat-clearing crank), Drift Mouth drive Poster's West Virginian narratives past mere acoustic recollections or passed-down traditionals. It would be remiss to exclude coal from this entire world, because it's the reason Poster's people still exist, if only in an ember. Fittingly, Little Patch of Sky, is about finding solace in the tatters of survival. You could plug in anything really -- the promise of gold, oil, ol' time religion, or .coms -- as Poster is confident in the fact that the American Dream is finite.
    -- Kevin J. Elliott. Columbus, OH. January, 2018.

    Includes unlimited streaming of Little Patch Of Sky via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
    ... more
    ships out within 3 days
    Purchasable with gift card

      $9.99 USD or more 

     

lyrics

The switchback roads got me movin’ slow again
And I’ve been drivin’ since the mornin’ lost its shade
Our summer nights, well they fell to autumn rain
It makes you wonder how anything can stay

Don’t let the wind tell you which way to go
‘Cause tonight it’s blowin’ cold
Look around, said is this the way you want it baby?
I hear you singin’ nice and slow

You said you work all night and you sleep around al day
But you’re only livin’ for the bottle that you earn
Does it burn like the feeling of the sands
Through your fingers, that’s never to return?

Don’t let the wind tell you which way to go
‘Cause tonight it’s blowin’ cold
Look around, said is this the way you want it baby?
I hear you singin’ nice and slow

Late in the night you asked if we were friends
And I don’t think so, but sometimes it’s hard to know
I missed a turn in the blackness and the rain
But I will take you as far as you wanna go

Don’t let the wind tell you which way to go
‘Cause tonight it’s blowin’ cold
Look around, said is this the way you want it baby?
I hear you singin’ nice and slow

credits

from Little Patch Of Sky, released August 1, 2018

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