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Thalia
Zedek started her career as a musician in the group Dangerous
Birds, whose 1982 single "Alpha Romeo" is a rare find these
days. She really made her mark shortly thereafter with Uzi,
whose 1986 Homestead release Sleep Asylum was a landmark not
only for the Boston region but for the underground in general.
It rightfully put Thalia in the company of other challenging
female pioneers such as Kim Gordon, and was reissued by Matador
in the mid-1990's to much acclaim. In 1998, a mere two years
after Uzi, Thalia broke new ground again with the NYC band
Live Skull. The three records that she released with them
more than stand the test of time and laid the groundwork for
artists who followed such as PJ Harvey. They laid the ground
work for artists to follow such as PJ Harvey. It was with
Come that Thalia rose with the swell of popularity of so called
Indie Rock. Fueled by the guitar interplay between herself
and bandmate Chris Brokaw, Come released four full length
records as well as various EP's and singles and toured extensively
throughout the 90s.
After Come ended in 1999, Thalia began writing and recording
under her own name, but throughout her career Thalia's voice
has remained a singular calling card. Her songwriting has
great depth and a pervading melancholic tone much like the
work of Nick Cave. She has chosen unusual instrumentation
to compliment her guitar, such as the viola and trumpet contributions
of David Curry. Her songs are rich in texture and reveal with
each listen their delicately crafted layers. Her debut album
for Thrill Jockey, 2004's Trust Not Those in Whom Without
Some Touch of Madness, garnered great critical acclaim, and
the Adelaide performance on her Australian tour for that album
even earned a spot on The Wire magazine's top 60 Greatest
Shows Ever.
For the new album, Liars and Prayers, Thalia has expanded
upon her touring band of the last few years of Daniel Coughlin
(drums) and David Curry (viola, trumpet) to fill out the sound
with the bass and piano of Winston Braman (Consonant, Sherperdess,
Fuzzy) and Mel Lederman (Victory at Sea). Liars and Prayers
is the masterwork of her thus far impressive career. Her voice
and songs have never been stronger and the full band and the
recording by Andrew Schneider (Unsane, Cave In) allow her
to combine the delicacy of the arrangements of her trio with
the force that was her band Come. The very moving "Body Memory"
is a poignant example of this perfect synthesis.
What follows is a bit about Liars and Prayers in Thalia's
own words.
" One really cool thing about the new record "Liars and
Prayers" is that it marks the return in my life of two musicians,
Winston Braman and Mel Lederman, both of whom I've been really
close to throughout the years, both musically and personally.
It happened at the perfect time, when I was struggling a bit
with wanting to move in new directions. After releasing Trust
Not... on Thrill Jockey in 2004, me, Dave and Daniel toured
extensively in Europe, Australia and the US as a 3 piece,
as we had been doing since 2001. But when that was all done,
I found myself feeling a bit constricted in terms of the instrumentation
of the band. Just kind of like we had taken the viola-drums-guitar
thing as far as we could over the course of three records.
I found that the new songs that I was writing were a lot heavier
and for the first time since Come, I felt like maybe I wanted
to play with a bass player for this new material. Shortly
thereafter, we played a show with Winston's band Sheperdess,
and I told him that I'd been writing stuff that I thought
would sound good with a bass. He came to a rehearsel the following
weekend. At the end he just propped his bass in the corner
of the room and said "So, practice next Sunday?" I was like,
uh sure, and just like that we had a bass player.
Coincidentally, Dinosaur Jr. contacted me later that week
and asked if we wanted to open up five East Coast shows for
them. It seemed like a perfect time to try playing as a four-piece
so we quickly got some of the new material together and taught
Winston some of the older songs and went on the road! A couple
of weeks after we got back from the tour I got a call from
Mel Lederman. He had played piano on all 3 of my previous
solo records but rarely did live shows with us as he was very
busy with his band Victory at Sea. He told me that Victory
at Sea was (sadly) breaking up and that he really wanted to
start doing shows and playing with me again. I didn't know
how it would work suddenly going from a three-piece to a four-piece
and now to a five-piece, but I knew that Mel was such a great
piano player that there was no way I was going to let this
opportunity get away. It was great because Mel already knew
most of my material from the previous records and sounded
great on all of the new stuff. So now I had my wish, a whole
new range of a musical "pallette" to work with and new material
really started flowing quickly.
I was eager to start recording with the new band and Andrew
Schneider was a name that had always come up whenever it came
time to do a new record. I had done recording sessions with
him before, but it was always as a guest on other people's
records , never for my own stuff. The result is Liars and
Prayers which I'm very happy with and proud of.
Most of the songs on the record are pretty political in nature
and the title refers to that. Liars and prayers, meaning those
who lie and those who pray, mainly refers to the current US
administration who are big liars and big prayers and more
globally to all the scary shit that's going on in the world
in the name of religion, most of which is based on lies. "Next
Exit" and "Begin to Exhume" particularly address these issues
- paranoia promoted by lies to create a climate of fear, which
the administration can use to justify torture, violations
of habeus corpus, wiretapping and gulag prisons and internment
camps and other horrific crimes against humanity. Other songs
are more personal ("Body Memory", "Stars") about how it feels
to live in these times, and also about dear friends who passed
away due to battles with drug addiction, depression, and lack
of access to health care when they really needed it. And others
are musings on past regrets and hopes for the future ("circa
the end", "Green and Blue", "Come Undone").
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