Itโs remarkable how TV themes can transform an artistโs fortunes, especially when it comes to True Detective. The acclaimed first season of the HBO drama took โFar From Any Roadโ, an obscure Handsome Family tune that was already over ten years old by 2014, and hoisted the cult duo onto the international stage. Within months, and umpteen millions of social media hits later, the song had been co-opted by Guns NโRoses as intro music for their world tour and, altogether more impressively, achieved the ultimate pop culture accolade by fetching up on an episode of The Simpsons. For a band who align themselves to the decidedly uncommercial world of Doc Boggs and Harry Smith, it wasnโt bad going at all.
A similar fate befell Lera Lynn last year. She might not yet have made it to the fictional environs of Springfield, but the general consensus is that the Nashville singer-songwriter was the best thing about True Detectiveโs otherwise patchy second series. Her appearance as the resident turn in a near-empty bar, dispensing sad-slow songs through the creeping gloom of the Black Rose, brought her a fair chunk of mainstream attention. By September she was undertaking her first major headline tour of the US and had just signed a new global publishing deal.
Newcomers to her music mightโve been forgiven for thinking that Lynn had sprung from nowhere. In truth, sheโs been around for a while. 2011 debut Have You Met Lera Lynn?, recorded while the Texas-born singer was still living in Georgia, where sheโd been raised, was a bewitching set that adhered to the same old-school Patsy-and-Loretta values as fellow countryphiles like Neko Case or Caitlin Rose. Then it all went quiet as Lynn regrouped her thoughts and upped sticks for Nashville, casting around for new management and a fresh backing band.
Finally, in 2014, she emerged with an EP, โLying In The Sunโ, and an overdue second album, The Avenues. Both offered ample evidence that sheโd lost none of her powers, allied to a newfound sense of dislocation in songs that twanged and cried steel with persuasive grace.
Itโs tempting to think that the True Detective experience has, to some degree, fed its way into her latest opus, Resistor. Certainly, itโs rich in atmosphere, Lynn and co-producer Joshua Grange evoking the kind of torchy, spectral noir that informs the best work of Cowboy Junkies or Mazzy Star. But thereโs also a less tangible, sinister element at play here, as if everything has been tilted slightly off centre. The house of shadows that is โRun The Nightโ, for instance, carries a cockeyed piano refrain that sounds like a backwards lullaby, serving as a neat signifier for the album itself. Many of these songs are similarly ambiguous, at least from a lyrical drift. Lynn often portrays romantic love as a scarred province where betrayal and deceit are as common as tenderness and lust. Hard metaphors drive home the point: gunpowder, arrows, blades, chains and the like.
The key musical flavours are Grangeโs tremolo guitar, an agent of tone and mood rather than straight-up riffing, and Lynnโs expertly weighted voice. Between them, and in keeping with the spontaneous nature of the album sessions, they tackle every instrument on Resistor, with the exception of Robby Handleyโs bass. This tends to keep things taught and economical throughout, a knobbly bassline enough to convey the tension of โWhat You Doneโ, with Lynnโs drawled words hinting at some terrible buried secret. โSlow Motion Countdownโ, too, is an ominous waltz marked by the soft tick of guitar and a measured beat that feels like someone slapping a heavy fist at the door.
There are nimble changes of temperature as well. Opener โShape Shifterโ is a punchy piece of leftfield-ish rock with Lynn in strident mode. As is โDriveโ, a highway song of escape whose baritone guitar and insistent groove echo the idea of wheels burning across cool midnight tarmac.
One of the most arresting moments is โFor The Last Timeโ, which traces the passage through life of someone nearing their endgame. โTheyโll roll her down the hall tonight/For the last timeโ, Lynn sings with open-throated abandon. โNearly a century done/Love, life, gain, lossโฆ Itโs a rough road on this way out.โ Accented by wordless harmonies, it was written, Lynn says, for her late grandmother. Like most everything on this beguiling album of minor-key pleasures, itโs blessed with both stoic resolve and real emotional heft. Not to mention a very singular, haunted allure.
Q&A
LERA LYNN
What made you go for a more experimental approach this time around?
The plan was to just try different things, which meant that the record ended up taking on a style and sound of its own. Joshua and I had a really clear vision of the production style and the approach to the instruments. For example, we didnโt want to use a drummer because we didnโt want the muscle memory of it. We wanted something that was very simple instead. So that was me in a lot of instances. Iโm not a drummer, but I can lay down a beat.
There seems to be a lot of break-up songs with hard metaphors of guns and arrowsโฆ
I was thinking of the double-edged sword of love, these gifts that are meant to express admiration but which are cutting you and hurting you. It does feel like there are some similar sentiments being expressed along those lines, kind of hanging onto the last shred of hope and love. Am I writing from experience? Yes and no!
Has True Detective made a noticeable difference to your profile in the States?
It certainly has. The biggest difference Iโve noticed is in touring. Many more people are coming to the shows and I guess theyโre buying records as well. Itโs been really helpful for me, because not having a major label means itโs difficult to gain the level of exposure that you need to make this career sustainable. Itโs inspiring to discover that thereโs an appreciation of more introspective and unsettling music out there.
INTERVIEW: ROB HUGHES
Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.