Peg Simone by Amanda Bruns

Peg Simone by Amanda Bruns

Photograph by Jonathan Kane

Photograph by Tyler Hubby

Photograph by Amanda Bruns

 
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Peg Simone
Secrets from the Storm
2010

Radium/Table of the Elements
TOE-CD-820
Compact disc

Guitar lines gather and mass like a blue sky filling with storm clouds. A flicker of lightning here and there, a steady thump of thunder in the distance, coming closer and closer. It takes awhile, so long, in fact, that you can almost be lulled by the patterns that form, the bits of sun that fight through the thickening shadows, the way the air crisps, the breeze playing the leaves like a zither. And the voice, like a ghost, or the radio late, late at night, echoing from an old rusty car in an abandoned junkyard, the dials twisted to an obscure AM frequency.

Secrets from the Storm is a unique collaboration between singer-songwriter (and guitarist for Jonathan Kane’s February) Peg Simone and writer Holly Anderson. Poetic shards of raw-knuckled memoir are inspired by everything from the Harry Crews novel The Gospel Singer to Memphis Minnie. The epic opener “Levee/1927” goes far beyond its sources – Memphis Minnie and Led Zeppelin – by turning its premise into a gripping tour-de-force of penumbral willies, sepulchural gasps, sensual jellyroll swagger, and bristling slide guitar that flashes up like a steel wolf trap in the moonlight, by turns furtive and brutal, as if the Velvet Underground had taken Albert King as a mentor instead of Andy Warhol.

“A lot of new music boasts of a good time, but it ends up being the same caffeinated sugar water in a fancy plastic bottle, completely lacking in nutrients, life, and anything that’s good for you. Peg Simone’s new music begins from pure places like poetry, the spoken word, the human breath, feedback, the mystical side of folk and blues, and the effect is icy water coming off the mountain, tasting of soil, rock and organic matter; you want to drink it and let it drip down your neck.”
Black Francis (The Pixies)

“Heightened by the epic baptismal immersion of “Levee/1927,” Peg Simone sing-speaks ghostly and shadowy narratives from the alluvial marshes of the human flood-plain.”
Lenny Kaye