Peg Simone's unearthly blues
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Artist:
Reid Paley sent me this excellent, self-released album by Peg Simone, a Brooklyn singer/songwriter who plays with his drummer.Here's my review, up on PopMatters today:Peg Simone, The Deeper You Get (Self-released)There is no sound quite so unearthly as slide guitar, that wavery, shimmery between-the-notes tone elicited by moving an edge of something—bone, bottleneck, metal or store-bought slide—down the neck of a guitar. Peg Simone, out of Brooklyn, employs the slide to bone-chilling effect here, fracturing raucous rock choruses and sepia-toned ballads into ghost images with its off-tuned eeriness. Her music is poised somewhere between Muddy Waters and Pere Ubu (Tony Maimone recorded this album at Studio G), pure blues tones stuttering across hectic post-punk rhythms, free-thinking modern lyrics bent around the age-old quandaries of love and violence. Simone uses both instruments—her breathy, rock-centered voice and slide guitar—in a variety of ways during the course of the album. “I Don’t Want to Meet You†haunts its echoing space with shivering slides and gem-like harmonics, while blues-traditional “I’m Calling†is sludgier and more grounded. “Spellbound†begins in a whisper and only explodes into rubber-band slides at the interstices. Yet regardless of whether songs are slow or fast, hard or soft, there’s an undercurrent of threat. “Hey little girl / don’t stick your head in the oven / there’s a rainbow coming / the wind will cool things down,†cautions Simone in opener, “The Sun Is Leakingâ€, introducing the idea of suicide and betrayal right up front and in her most rocking track. Later, in “Treasureâ€, she dreams of mutilation at the hand of a lover… and seems not to mind the idea very much. Much is modern about Simone’s take on rock and blues, not least the fact that it’s a woman playing those exquisite slides. But themes like love and hurt are ageless, and maybe built into the DNA of blues guitar. [Amazon]



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