Drill A Hole in that Substrate nd Tell Me What You
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Performer Notes
Personnel: Jim White (vocals, guitar, banjo, harmonica, melodica, trombone, piano, organ, keyboards, percussion); Jim White (acoustic guitar, flute, toy piano, chord organ); Ed Robertson (rap vocals, guitar); Steven Page (rap vocals, background vocals); Kevin Hearn (guitar, accordion, keyboards, synthesizer); Peter Gardiner, Guthrie Trapp, Dallas Good, Travis Good (guitar); Paul Rabjohns (acoustic guitar, mandolin, accordion, marimbula, bass guitar, snare drum, ron roco); Jon Hyde (pedal steel guitar, bass guitar); Chris Henrich (pedal steel guitar); Jeremiah Sullivan (mandolin); Eyvind Kang (viola, organ); Steve Moore (trombone, Wurlitzer piano, harmonium, Wurlitzer organ); Ryan Freeland (Clavinet); David Piltch (double bass, electric bass, bass guitar); Tyler Stewart (drums, percussion); Mike Belitsky (drums); Danny Frankel (bongos, percussion); Jim Creeggan (percussion); Mark Saunders (sampler); Ladies Of Loretta Lynching, Donna De Lory, Suzie Ungerleider, Linda Delgado, Mary Gauthier, Niki Haris, Oh Susanna (background vocals); Aimee Mann (vocals); Chris Bruce, Joe Henry, M. Ward, Bill Frisell (guitar); Paul Fonfara (viola, clarinet, saxophone); Ralph Carney (flute, saxophone, trumpet); Dorothy Robinett (bass clarinet); Dee Palmer (keyboards, synthesizer, sampler); Jay Bellerose (drums, bongos); Tucker Martine (drums, percussion); Marc Anthony Thompson, Terri Binion, Barenaked Ladies (background vocals).
Audio Mixers: Mark Saunders; Ryan Freeland.
Recording information: Jim White's Studios, Pensacola, FL; Kevin Hearn's Living Room; Paul Rabjohn's Posh Digs, Hollywood Hills; Stampede Origin.
Photographer: Vince Sullivan.
Jim White writes like a Southern gentlemen. When he released his cryptic debut, Wrong-Eyed Jesus, in 1997, he was approaching 40, and with each record his civil invective and genuine yearning for redemption have become more focused, culminating in an eccentric -- yet fully realized -- body of work that requires no aging to prove itself worthy. Drill a Hole in That Substrate and Tell Me What You See preens like an alley cat with a bellyful of chicken scraps. The thick veil of gloss that co-producers Joe Henry and Tucker Martine use to coat each of the 11 hypnotic tracks is entirely transparent, resulting in a glass-bottom boat ride that's both cathartic and uncomfortably voyeuristic. White's characters are always teetering on the edge of a bridge, faces cast skyward, wondering if whatever it is that's left them might swoop down just seconds before the first shoe drops. He meets his subjects on level ground, allowing them to speak through him as well as serve as their master's mouthpiece. On the spooky Tom Waits-style dirge "Borrowed Wings," the ghosts of doomed Bonnie and Clyde-cursed lovers weep "For in the fallow field where what's reaped is what's sown/There lies a road to ruin and it's paved with our tombstones." It's not all hellfire and brimstone, though, as evidenced by the goofy Barenaked Ladies collaboration "Alabama Chrome" and the bright -- almost hopeful -- hidden track, "Land Called Home." There's a deep Southern gothic vibe at work here that brings to mind the Spanish moss meanderings of Daniel Lanois' For the Beauty of Wynona, but it's the shadow of Waits that always gets the last word; "If Jesus Drove a Motor Home" sounds like a cross between something off of The Black Rider and the theme to The Sopranos, but it's interesting that despite all of the celebrity guests (Aimee Mann, Bill Frisell, M. Ward), it's White's self-produced tracks that mirror their creator's sewn up -- but still bleeding a little -- heart. ~ James Christopher Monger
Professional Reviews
Rolling Stone (p.176) - 3 stars out of 5 - "[I]t's a testament to his mastery of Southern-gothic atmosphere that his banjo, melodica and pedal steel musings on Jesus and haunted love never fail to raise goosebumps."
Entertainment Weekly (p.89) - "White conjures lost souls drifting through a mythical nation of pawnshops and cheap motels, his voice a sensual whisper over their rattling bones." - Grade: A
Uncut (p.76) - Ranked #37 in Uncut's "Best New Albums of 2004" - "[The] songs continue to observe the Southern culture that engulfs him with equal fascination and repulsion."
Mojo (Publisher) (p.92) - 4 stars out of 5 - "The South seems a place outside of chronological time, and so do Jim White's albums. However much intellect and outsiderness he brings to them, he is still clearly gripped by his homeland's dark, dreamy chaos."