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Garden Ruin

Calexico

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Album Review

When a band starts out with an aesthetic as specific as Calexico's, sometimes expanding that sound means incorporating more pop elements into it. And, after years of being known — accurately or not — as the indie-mariachi band, Calexico may have felt boxed in by their very distinctiveness. Like Feast of Wire, Garden Ruin finds them moving further into more song-based, immediately accessible territory (their collaborations and performances with bands like Wilco and Iron & Wine may have also inspired them to tone down their theatricality). With no instrumentals — a first on a Calexico album — and less emphasis on elaborate arrangements, Garden Ruin presents an almost mainstream version of Calexico, with mixed results. At times, as on "Yours and Mine," the band strays toward typical alt-country and ends up sounding overly restrained and mature. However, the beautiful melodies on "Panic Open String" and "Bisbee Blue" (a warm little love song to Bisbee, AZ, where the album was recorded) and the '70s singer/songwriterisms of "Lucky Dime" prove that the band can bend pop to Calexico's sound instead of vice versa. Though Joey Burns' whispery vocals help make Garden Ruin feel initially more hushed than it actually is, it becomes clear as the album unfolds that Calexico haven't completely abandoned their flair for striking arrangements and drama. They've just channeled it in different directions. "Cruel" — whose lyrics deal with environmental corruption — nods to the classic Calexico sound with its swooning pedal steel, brass, and strings, while "Roka" is a haunted yet sexy-sounding duet that echoes the band's most stunning moments. "Letter to Bowie Knife" (which sounds like a kissing cousin to their fantastic cover of Love's "Alone Again Or?") marries lyrics like "This world's an ungodly place" to a buoyant melody, one of Calexico's time-tested tricks. Likewise, the gentlest, most intimate ballad is called "Smash" — but even this relatively quiet song has thunderous timpani rolling in the distance. The band also rocks more than it has in the past, earnestly on "Deep Down" and with real anguish on Garden Ruin's striking final track, "All Systems Red." Ultimately, this album ends up being a more naturalistic take on Calexico's sound; just because it's less stylized doesn't mean it's less interesting — it just takes a little more time for Garden Ruin's power to reveal itself.

Customer Reviews

Just Great Music

I'm a big fan of Calexico. After watching the movie "Happy Endings" I was hooked. Their previous albums were heavily influenced by latin beats, but this one is a bit of a departure (with the obvious exception of the song "Roka"). Each song is better produced and has a sound quality that many of their previous efforts lack. Calexico has definitely updated their style here, which some may like. I found it to be one of their best all around albums. Definitely a good buy!!

Calexico's Best

Ever since stumbling into a Calexico concert by accident, I've tried to keep an eye on the group. This album is, first of all, much more mainstream than their previous efforts. But it works incredibly well. Joey Burns sheds a mountain of emotional weight- lyircally and vocally. The album is tightly wound around themes of war and the mythology of the west, and in that respect it might be comparable to Josh Ritter's "The Animal Years." But this album, for me, achieved what "Animal Years" didn't. There's some obvious influence from the Iron & Wine collaboration "Lays in the Reins" (but that's definately not a bad thing). If you've ever thought you'd like a little more from Calexico, this is the album.

a quaint canyon overlook

While most previous music from Calexico leaves you haunted and broken in the dying desert sun, bones bleached by the sheer beauty of life and death as cactus bloom at your feet and the vultures circle over your thirsty head..this is a quaint canyon overlook. (excluding all systems red)

Biography

Formed: Tucson, AZ

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '90s, '00s

Calexico, a Tucson collective of musicians focused around Joey Burns and John Convertino, forged an eclectic identity through their exploration of Southwestern culture. Composer Ennio Morricone's spaghetti Westerns as well as Portuguese fado, Afro-Peruvian music, and '50s and '60s jazz, country, and surf music all factored into Calexico's music. Burns studied classical music at the University of California, Irvine, before starting his rock career, and Calexico formed after Burns met John Convertino...
Full Bio

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