Zen and the art of twang: LAโ€™s cosmic psych cowboys return after a decade-long hiatusโ€ฆ

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Picking up nearly where they left off in their early-2000s prime, Los Angelesโ€™ Beachwood Sparksโ€™ reunion renews their kaleidoscopic, Californian approach to country-rockโ€”a good-natured, soul-searching wash of sound in which vibe is everything. The Tarnished Gold, mature, with a revelatory appreciation for the simple life, might prove to be the true spiritual heir to their auspicious 2000 debut: winsome Zen-like roots/rock bursting from the heart with rich, ebullient harmonies, and atmospheric smears of steel guitar amid gentle sun-baked melodies.

In their original 1997-2002 run, Beachwood Sparks were a band out of time. Too late for much notice by the No Depression generation, but appearing well in advance of the waves of Fleet Foxes and Bon Ivers, their timing was questionable. Yet in their unassuming way, they were perhaps the most convincing descendants yet in a cross-generational lineage of classic LA country-rockers, starting with the Byrds, and winding through the Flying Burritos, the Long Ryders, Minneapolis transports the Jayhawks, and Sparklehorseโ€”though with an Elephant 6 twist: a raw sense wonder in their voices (and those heavenly harmonies), and a fascinatingly trippy bit of noise/rock and psychedelic experimentation in their sound.

All four Sparks principalsโ€”including main songwriters Chris Guntz and Brent Rademakerโ€”plus guitarist and frequent Ryan Adams collaborator Neal Casal, are on board for the rebirth, recorded essentially live in the studio. From the ease-in of the opener, โ€œForget the Song,โ€ softly burnished vocals enveloped in electric guitar curlicues and ethereal steel, the group pulls off their particular and peculiar world-unto-itself, floating-dream ambiance.

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While the self-explanatory โ€œSparks Will Fly,โ€ a relatively rambunctious tribute-to-themselves replete with exhortative Beach Boys-style backing vocalsโ€”โ€œTampa to LA on a West Coast flight!โ€ sings Farmer Dave Scher with a radiance worthy of Chuck Berry on โ€œPromised Landโ€โ€”kicks up some dust (especially given its shimmering Notorious Byrd Brothers guitar break), most of The Tarnished Gold inhabits those groggy moments between dreamland and wakefulnessโ€”gauzy, pensive mindtrips atop simple folk structures, lyrics zeroing in on love and loneliness, dead-ends and simple acceptance, basic human existence.

โ€œWater From the Wellโ€ is a case in point: With its gentle, stair-step guitar and rolling-river melodyโ€”rustic contemplations on freedom and the wonder of natureโ€”itโ€™s a kind of salve, soul music for complicated times. โ€œNatureโ€™s Lightโ€ and โ€œLeave That Light On,โ€ sister songs both, follow suit, sprawling, expansive pieces, hushed voices merging with gentle cascades of fingerpicked guitar.

Not everything works to perfection: โ€œNo Queremos Oro,โ€ a mariachi-style tribute to Gunstโ€™s LA roots, ambitious and warmly executed, simply doesnโ€™t fit in; Rademakerโ€™s down-home โ€œTalk About Lonesomeโ€ is surely the albumโ€™s catchiest, most straight-ahead number, exuding pure Nashville-style songcraft, with harmonica accents and a sing-songy chorus. But it doesnโ€™t play to the bandโ€™s strengths, its lack of depth rendering it (admittedly, over many listens) as a kind of throwaway.

โ€œEarl Jean,โ€ showing off their innate pop sense, though, might be Tarnished Goldโ€™s most impressive cut. Buried toward discsโ€™ end, itโ€™s a love song, its laidback seesaw melody ushering listeners into their own personal daydream, before pin-prick guitar leads explode into an open-hearted vocal. โ€œDonโ€™t feel so strange/As there could be at any moment a change,โ€ goes one lyric, reminiscent of Dillard & Clarkโ€˜s โ€œOut On the Side.โ€

Other highlights abound: โ€œThe Orange Grass Special,โ€ echoes of Johnny Cash and Carter Family Americana, is a nice detour; brief closer, โ€œGoodbye,โ€ verging on lullaby, wraps things up as pure dreamscape. Still, Tarnished Goldโ€™s gorgeous title track is its centerpieceโ€”musically and philosophicallyโ€”and definitive Beachwood Sparks: with Gunstโ€™s vocal cradling its evergreen melody like a newborn baby amid tender harmonies and sunrays of steel guitar, itโ€™s part love song, part elegy to the mysteries of life: โ€œFunny how when you find what youโ€™re looking for/It was already there.โ€

Luke Torn

Q&A

Chris Gunst

What is it about Byrds/Burritos country-rock that holds such sway?

I think that the connection to Byrds, Burritos, etc. became more of a talking point for press rather than how we felt, and I think it kind of pigeonholed us a bit. I mean obviously the sound of some of those records was influential, but so was . . . Felt, Ride, Spiritualized, Joy Division etc. But how do you wrap that craziness up in a soundbite?

How would you characterize it then?

I donโ€™t think it was a desire to live in the 70โ€™s or something. I think the style was influential as well as enjoyment of the aesthetic. It is in our collective conscious as a band, and a place where we have common ground and meet. When we are together, this is the music we make. The band seems to take on a meta-identity of its own.

What does โ€œCosmic American Musicโ€ mean to you?

Two things: When I hear that, I have attachments to certain music or bandsโ€“such as Parsons, Byrds, Burritos, Beach Boys, but I also have a more literal understanding: America, the openness of the landscape, independent nature as a tradition of some Americans, connection to the land, mixing of cultures, creating new traditions, reinvention, alchemy.

INTERVIEW: Luke Torn

Photo: Jim Goodrich