In the past year or so, Ryley Walker has faced a peculiarly modern dilemma: how can he be a confessional singer-songwriter, in the tradition of his old heroes like Tim Buckley, when he finds it easier to reveal his true self on social media? Thus far, Walker has seemed more of an impulsive than a re...
Four key influences on Ryley Walker’s magnum opus
MARK EITZEL
60 Watt Silver Lining
WARNER BROS 1996
Eitzel’s unravelling confessional spiels, in American Music Club and beyond, are a plain influence on songs like “Funny Thing She Said” – and none more so than this jazz-tinged brooder. “I just fell in love with that guy’s music,” says Walker. “I love that record. He has a conversational approach to music which sounds like a guy at the end of a bar losing his mind at 2 am. It’s painfully personal, even if it’s embarrassing, and I like that approach.”
SUN KIL MOON
April
CALDO VERDE 2008
Mark Eitzel’s sadcore contemporary in early ’90s San Francisco, Mark Kozelek’s Noughties music had most impact on Walker: “We did his stuff in high school as a band.” A 2008 Chicago Sun Kil Moon show remains one of Walker’s favourite ever concerts, while his regular keyboard player Ben Boye is currently working with Kozelek in the latest touring incarnation of Sun Kil Moon. “I went from adoring this guy and opening up for him, to having a friend in his band. I couldn’t be any more proud.”
JIM O’ROURKE
Halfway To A Threeway
DRAG CITY/DOMINO 1999
The baroque end of ’90s Chicago post-rock is writ large on Walker’s latest work, particularly on the opening “The Halfwit In Me”. Archer Prewitt and Sam Prekop of The Sea And Cake also feature on this meticulously-realised EP, which finds O’Rourke at his drollest. Walker: “My sense of humour’s dry, and here in Chicago and the Midwest, the person you have to make fun of is yourself.”
ALICE COLTRANE
Journey In Satchidananda
IMPULSE! 1970
Although the key new influences on Golden Sings… reflect Walker’s increased focus on his lyrics, an overt love of cosmic jazz comes to the fore on the outstanding closing track, “Age Old Tale”, as harp flurries and a steady jangle of bells specifically reference the title track of Coltrane’s spiritual masterpiece. “I’m really into Alice Coltrane records at the moment,” he told Uncut last year. “I’m trying to sing like Alice Coltrane plays the harp.”