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L.A. Citybeat: BEST OF THE WEST

~ By RON GARMON ~ CITY BEAT.gif
L.A. City Beat
June 29th, 2006

Anchoring a corner in one of Sunset Boulevard’s less tony strip malls, Safari Sam’s already feels like a cool drink at the well to this transplanted Appalachian hillbilly. Indeed, pull down the mezzanine (but leave the wreckage), and this spacious box-with-stage looks like a twice-scale model of the Wagon Wheel, a long-defunct West Virginia country-cooze honky-tonk from whose bar I lifted my first illegal beer. Here last Saturday (June 24), by the twos and threes, crept in the elderly hippies, the part-time rednecks, the Inland diaspora, tattooed girls in tight print dresses, hipsters-with-ears, and aligned buckaroos of all ages, both genders, and every ethnicity – yeah, the whole Hee Haw gang – for L.A.’s greatest practitioners of the high-lonesome tonal art, I See Hawks in L.A. and Dave Alvin and the Guilty Men. Looking about me at this friendly, flirty assemblage, I could see a Red State glowing in every heart.

When last I checked on ironists I See Hawks, they were pursuing a nice line in astringent, cannabinoid C&W, with but the merest hint of the cozmik choogle they throw down now. Their third album, California Country, can be filed alongside The Notorious Byrd Brothers and Burrito Deluxe as evocation of the acidhead West; a land of purple trees and hard times, of loss, predation, circling helicopters, and second-generation hippie chix shaking their asses. These Riders of the Purple Booj make honky-tonk sweetness out of this welter of good and bad and worse, with Angeleno THC meditativeness standing in for the beery familiarity of Buck Owens, Merle Haggard, and the Bakersfield sound.

Sophisticates may sneer (with or without surgery’s aid) and Westsiders squirm, but, like everything beautiful, such numbers as “Motorcycle Mama” and “Houston Romance” provide their own justification. There’s something of Haggard’s whimsical toughness in Rob Waller’s voice, and the songs evince some of Randy Newman’s knack for gone-dead Goya caricature. The eternal Huck Finn penchant for the wistful (“Raised by Hippies”), the tall-tale fantastic (“Slash from Guns N’ Roses”), and the fatalistic (“Jackpot!”) are stylishly indulged on disc, but they’re thrown down like a rock ‘n’ roll barn dance live. Patrons sweated and gripped each other as room temperature rose and outer garments peeled away.

NO DEPRESSION article July 2006: “ISHILA’S COMMON STRANGENESS”

by William Michael Smith

You might judge I See Hawks in L.A. by the company they keep. Rick Shea, Dave Alvin’s guitarist for the past half decade, sits in with the group as often as his schedule permits. Fiddler Brantley Kearns, another regular in Alvin’s band who played for years with Dwight Yoakam, is essentially a fifth member of the band. Chris Hillman adds mandolin to three tracks on I See Hawks’ latest disc, California Country, its title betraying the band’s debt to Hillman’s trailblazing work with the Byrds and the Flying Burrito Brothers.

Shea says the Hawks lie somewhere on along the California musical continuum “from Sweethearts of the Rodeo to Captain Beefheart.” The three-part harmonies between guitarist Rob Waller, multi-instumentalist Paul Lacques and bassist Paul Marshall have become a distinctive element of their sound. Drummer Shawn Nourse, who’d previously played with Yoakam and James Intveld, rounds out the lineup.

Lyrically, the band has become know for stoner songs such as “Barrier Reef” — “the keeper of the leaf is the barrier reef to my sanity” — and “Humboldt,” a vivid ode to designer pot growers in northern California: “I’d be glad to plant corn in the ground/ But corn don’t go for three thousand a pound.”

With many Los Angeles country-scene players having communal ties to I See Hawks, the shuffling “who’s available” lineup lends a supple “how will it sound tonight?” flexibility to their shows. On their 2004 album Grapevine, “Humboldt” received a traditional big-beat Burrito-esque country-rock treatment, but a website live version sounds like a psychedelic electric bluegrass raga band playing after-hours at the Grateful Dead house.

Shea calls frontman Waller “an amazing singer — strange, sad, poetic, crazed, controversial. And any lyric, when he sings it, makes perfect sense, like you’re sitting around getting high talking to a good friend.” Waller, a creative writing instructor at USC, and Lacques, a successful playwright and comic strip creator, began to write together in Lacques’ Echo Park apartment in 1999. They issued their self-titled debut disc in 2001, with Kearns contributing fiddle.

Their songs are rife with mournful social commentary, environmental tragedy, wily humor, outsider guile, and political undercurrent. The title track of California Country elaborates on the eerie late-night cover photo of a lonely gas pump island along some Golden State commuter alley. The angst at the loss of California’s natural beauty to population and progress sends a message that is simultaneously spiritually uplifting and politically bitter.

Elsewhere, on the gently sarcastic “Hard Times (Are Here Again)”, Waller wryly bemoans, “There’s no ink in my printer/ It’ll be a long, long winter,” while the hilarious and surreal “Slash from Guns N’ Roses” drops a bunker buster bomb on Hollywood pretension.

Asked about the occasional political nature of the band’s material, Waller is bemused. “We’re not a polemical band, not right-wing or left-wing or any of that,” he says. “We’re just trying to react honestly to the madness of politics today in a way that’s not dogmatic or affiliated with any political group.”

And the marijuana anthems? Waller shrugs. “Ah, the misconception that we’re a ‘pot band.’ In a way those songs are political too, just a big ‘screw you’ to everyone who thinks pot is a crucial issue compared to all the horrific stuff going on.”

Waller is similarly cagey about the Hawks’ musical identity.” We knew it was going to be country, but that’s about all the ‘What kind of music is it?’ strategy we put into it,” he says. “We tried to write interesting songs and eventually found that Hawks sound. Paul had a very successful play in the ’80s about an egomaniacal polka band leader, so I sensed a kindred spirit. As we worked together, we came upon this common strangeness in each other that we both enjoyed.”

Philip Van Vleck, Durham Herald-Sun: Band Follows in Footsteps of “Cosmic Country” Ancestors

By Philip Van Vleck, Special to The Herald-Sun (Durham, NC)
June 15, 2006

RALEIGH — One of the genuinely interesting country bands on the scene nowadays is I See Hawks in L.A. The group is on the road in support of their latest album, “California Country,” and they’ll be making a stop at Raleigh’s Pour House Sunday evening.

I See Hawks is, as the title of their new album suggests, a California-based group. They’ve released three albums, with their self-titled debut disc coming in 2001. Each album has raised the ante in terms of what we might expect from this band. The mentality behind their vibe is expansive and still developing.

I See Hawks’ second record, “Grapevine,” was one of the best albums of 2004. The mood of the disc was somber, even cerebral, and the sound was a beautifully resonant evocation of California country music, albeit spun to suit the I See Hawks personality.

“California Country,” on the other hand, is long on wit and shrewd observation. The sound is often described by music critics as “cosmic country,” which is a reasonably coherent allusion to I See Hawks predecessors such as The Byrds, The Flying Burrito Brothers, and Gram Parsons.

The cosmic country label for I See Hawks’ music is “pretty close,” founding member Rob Waller, a Minnesota native who graduated from Duke in 1994, said. “I like the term surrealist folk.”

Some of the “California Country” tunes, however, are more topical than surrealistic. One of the most unexpected songs on the album is definitely “Byrd From West Virginia.”

Waller said he finds Sen. Robert Byrd of West Virginia a complex and inspiring figure.

“In the lead-up to the Iraq war, he was the one guy who really got up there and not only spoke against the whole idea — and did so eloquently — but also reminded Americans of our values and what the Constitution means, and the danger of going out on this foreign military adventure,” Waller said. “And nobody listened to him.

“This guy has some wisdom in his years and he’s definitely got a complicated life story. By no means has he been a pure example of righteousness and we tried to include as much of his biography as we could, both the dark and the light.”

“California Country” also features a very dramatic, amusing song about Guns N’ Roses guitarist Slash.

“That song’s based on some true facts,” Waller said. “There was a Slash impersonator going around Los Angeles, getting all the benefits of being Slash at the peak of his career without having to actually be Slash.”

The song envisions a Hollywood party at which the real Slash confronts the fake Slash.

“California Country” is a different album, conceptually, from “Grapevine.” It asks us once again to revise what we think we know about I See Hawks.

“Our pursuit is to get more imaginative,” Waller said of the new recording. “The songs that we’re working on for our fourth record show that our vision is getting even more clear. I mean, we’re not at a loss in terms of where we want to go musically. Whether or not people will come with us, I have no idea,” he laughed.

“We want to make more vivid pictures that are more imaginative, even more surreal, or dreamlike. There’s a liberating thing that happens when you pursue that, when you pursue your strangest vision. From the beginning we’ve not wanted to write clichéd country lyrics. We wanted to see what it was like to write country songs and folk songs that had nontraditional lyrics. And at this point we’ve arrived at ‘Slash From Guns N’ Roses.’ “

I See Hawks in L.A. is definitely a band in an interesting creative situation. Their music is often evocative of the other California — the Buck Owens-Roy Clark California beyond the frantic glitz of L.A. On the other hand, they’re very much a part of what’s up in Los Angeles today. It’s a best-of-both-worlds scenario that’s generating outstanding music.

The Times of Acadiana, Lafayette, Louisiana

In “Waiting Around to Die”, Townes Van Zandt sang about his new friend codeine. Zandt was a stellar weaver of song, taking country music into new places — finely worded and evocative poetry. The boys in I See Hawks in L.A. (playing the Blue Moon this Sunday) share Zandt’s song writing approach … and perhaps his friend. Formed during a philosophical discussion/rock throwing session in the Mojave desert, I See Hawks can’t help but gaze directly at the sun — an edgy country rock reminiscent of the 1970s, the Flying Burrito Brothers and Gram Parsons. With their three-part harmony and a knack for songwriting rivaling a mix of Zandt’s poetry and Ray Wylie Hubbard’s smart, heady material, they also incorporate sly near-comic genius in their story tales songs. Modern troubadours of descriptive narratives and stand-for-something songs, their dreamy alt. country/country rock drifts towards the heavens like embers from a campfire dancing in the wind of a desert night. While remaining grounded in country music, the band takes it on a ride — music for the open road and the open mind.

— Nick Pittman, Times of Acadiana

JOHNNY WHITESIDE, L.A. WEEKLY review

“These freewheeling lords of California psych country approach their music as if it were a portal, an unseen threshold that, once crossed, promises a wholly unpredictable experience. The Hawks’ singular style operates on an epic scale, exploring weird panoramas of hallucinatory metaphor with a sound as much traditional hillbilly as it is accelerated lysergic-rock spontaneity. Any flight taken with I See Hawks In L.A. assures a view to startling new perspectives. Up, up and away.”

— Jonny Whiteside, L.A. WEEKLY

AUSTIN CHRONICLE, CHICAGO DAILY HERALD reviews

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I See Hawks in L.A. is all about state pride. The quartet’s latest CD, California Country (Western Seeds), mixes the cosmic-cowboy sound of Sixties L.A. (former Flying Burrito Brother Chris Hillman guests on mandolin) with Americana, traversing the landscape of the Golden State like Didion on horseback. It’s a divine fusion of humor and twang that’s definitely high, but not that lonesome.

–- Audra Schroeder

dailyheraldlogo.jpg

There is something very evocative about the name of this band and, thankfully, the music, too. I See Hawks in L.A. is a cosmic country band from the West Coast in league with the Byrds, Buffalo Springfield and the Flying Burrito Brothers. The band’s three-part harmonies are winners, plus their lyrics about the burnt-out wasteland give their music a winsome psychedelic bent. They don’t get to the Midwest that often; this show is to showcase their most recent album, “California Country.”

— Mark Guarino, Chicago Daily Herald

MIAMI NEW TIMES REVIEWS “CALIFORNIA COUNTRY”

On their third album, the core members of I See Hawks in L.A. are joined by Chris Hillman (Byrds, Flying Burrito Brothers), Rick Shea (Dave Alvin Band), and other heavies from L.A.’s alt-country gang, but it’s the songwriting of the principal bandmates that grabs your attention. Rob Waller, lead vocalist and guitarist; and Paul Lacques, who supplies the high harmonies and plays lap steel, dobro, and guitar, craft memorable melodies with lyrics that conjure up the dreams and nightmares of Californians past and present. “Raised by Hippies” blends bluegrass and rock to look at the past through slightly jaundiced eyeglasses. “Slash from Guns N’ Roses” is a sea shanty for people shipwrecked on the shoals of the Sunset Strip — a dark song delivered with considerable humor. “Hard Times (Are Here Again)” is an acoustic country blues that nods to Woody Guthrie’s working-class poetry with Hillman’s mandolin fills and Lacques’s wailing dobro adding to the song’s hopeless melancholy.

— J. Poet, Miami New Times

DALLAS OBSERVER, DENVER WESTWORD reviews

“California Country,” the third effort from this oddly named roots quartet from the sunshine state, is heavily indebted to The Flying Burrito Brothers, the early Eagles and probably some kind of psychedelic drug. Full of sweet, Byrds-like harmonizing, songs like “Slash from Guns N’ Roses” and “Motorcycle Mama” are peculiar tongue-in-cheekers with an earnest appreciation of the less appealing aspects of rural life, and singer Rob Wallers’ baritone and Paul Lacques’ subtle guitar and dobro strike a fruitful balance between the regular and the just plain weird. Genuinely surreal in a professional sort of way, I See Hawks in L.A. offers a warped take on Americana that wonderfully defies easy categorization.

— Darryl Smyers, Dallas Observer

On their third album the core members of I See Hawks in L.A. are joined by Chris Hillman (Byrds, Flying Burrito Brothers), Rick Shea (Dave Alvin Band) and other heavies from L.A.’s alt-country gang. It’s the songwriting of the principal bandmates, though, that grabs your attention. Lead vocalist and guitarist Rob Waller and Paul Lacques — who supplies the high harmonies and plays lap steel, dobro and guitar — craft memorable melodies with lyrics that conjure up the dreams and nightmares of Californians past and present. “Raised by Hippies” blends bluegrass and rock to look at the past through slightly jaundiced eyeglasses, while “Slash From Guns N’ Roses” is a sea chantey for people shipwrecked on the shoals of the Sunset Strip — a dark song delivered with considerable humor. “Hard Times (Are Here Again)” is an acoustic country-blues cut that nods to Woody Guthrie’s working-class poetry, with Hillman’s mandolin fills and Lacques’s wailing dobro adding to the song’s hopeless melancholy.

— j. poet, Denver Westword

Buzzflash Reviews “California Country”

Tony Peyser’s “Blue State Jukebox” Review — May, 2006 Edition

I often find myself writing about musicians from Texas. Maybe it’s because their songs resonate with a strong sense of place: this is where I am, this is where I’ve been, this is where I’m going. Pick up virtually any album by Ray Wylie Hubbard, Adam Carroll or Eliza Gilkyson and that basic terrain will be covered. What they create aren’t just songs for an album but stories from their hometowns.

These basic components are what drew me to a band from right here in the City Of Angels: I See Hawks In L.A. I saw them one night a while back in a club on Hollywood Blvd. called King King that used to be a Chinese restaurant. The songs soared like the birds referenced in the band’s name. I See Hawks sublimely embody the country-rock sound that the legendary Gram Parsons pretty much invented. Parsons — who ignored Neil Young’s advice and burned out instead of rusted — would be proud.

On “Motorcycle Mama” — the opening track from California Country — I See Hawks sing, “I tried to ride with the motorcycle mama/But the motorcycle let me down.” Pedal steel guitars wend their way through this yarn of being lured by the Golden State dream but never quite finding it. One of the main products manufactured on the Left Coast is disappointment but I See Hawks find a way to describe this in a glorious fashion. And the legendary allure lives on with lines like these: “She’s riding free over the trees/crossing over the great divide/I’m down with my tears & beers but I know someday I’ll ride.” The ooh-ooh-oohs in the chorus are as irresistible as the state’s enduring siren call of fun in the sun.

“Raised By Hippies” covers almost forty years in just under six minutes. It’s the saga of a hippie girl born in 1968: “Nixon was heading to that big White House/And the bombs would soon be dropping on the children of Laos.” She has such a sweet and decent disposition that she manages to endure the Reagan and Bush I & II years. And, perhaps most tellingly, it’s the things she learned from her parents that help give them hope during the post-Woodstock era. I’d bet a lava lamp that her peace-and-love Mom and Dad played “Teach Your Children” to their young daughter who luckily paid attention and wound up later teaching them.

Flexing their creative muscles, I See Hawks later chronicle the story of another young girl. But this time, they shelve the innocence and embark on a dark drama called “Golden Girl.” The descent into exploits worthy of one of Jim Thompson’s pulpy novels is not without foreshadowing. The narrator glimpses an angelic 17-year-old in a church choir and observes, “As we bowed our heads in prayer she gave me a wink/I knew our book was written in the devil’s ink.” There’s a palpable conflict here between the music and lyrics. The former seems to be on her side and is always light, airy and seductive. But the latter keeps reminding the listener that this girl is bad news, no matter how good she looks. “Golden Girl” is the polar opposite of “Raised By Hippies,” its landscape riddled with sex, guns, crime, betrayal and revenge. When a robbery goes south in a Navajo bar and the shooting commences, you may find yourself ducking. It’s that vivid a song. This cautionary tale could result in less dates involving bad girls and nice guys.

I had the album playing while I was doing some other work and suddenly found myself delightfully bewildered at the fourth track, “Slash From N’ Roses.” This has a to be some kind of a first: a song about rock and roll identity theft. This crackerjack guitarist — sort of like the kid in “Six Degrees Of Separation” who pretended to be Sidney Poitier’s son — has bamboozled various folks into thinking he’s really the guy from that famous band. As they used to say in every TV Guide sitcom description, “trouble ensues” when the real Slash shows up: “At the top of the highest hill in the hills of Hollywood/Two mansions were competing to see who could/Throw the biggest baddest party this town has ever seen/2690 Beachwood said, ‘We’ve got Slash.’/2693 Beachwood said, ‘Oh yeah? Well, so do we.'” A guitar rumble tumbles out on this canyon street in a climax that’s equal parts mythic and comic. It reminded me of video I saw once around ten years ago but never forgot of Wyclef Jean channeling The Bee Gees in “We Trying To Stay Alive.” Directed by Roman Coppola, it similarly depicted archrivals engaging musical fisticuffs. I See Hawks don’t spell it all out in the song, so we’re allowed to fill in the blanks as the real and faux rockers raise their guitars to do battle. “Slash From Guns N’ Roses” is a one of a kind song that jumps out like a guitar solo by, uh, Slash from Guns N’ Roses.

In “California Country,” I See Hawks put everything they feel about the state they live in to describe the state of mind they live with: “I am a child of the golden state/I grew up in the orchards and fields/I’ve seen farm towns become commuter alleys/And shopping malls eat up the trees/Sometimes I wish for a simpler time/When you could drink right out of the stream/The loneliness around me, freeways just surround me/I’m 30 miles from a field of green …” Whatever sense of frustration and dislocation they feel is upended in the very next line as the mandolin kicks in and they sing, “But I’m still standing in California Country.” This sense of not giving up on where their roots are is also underscored a little later on whey they add, “Only now I understand I could ever leave this land/ I’m a California man.” Along with Mike Stinson’s “Late Great Golden State” — which has already been covered by Dwight Yoakam — “California Country” is another honest-to-God Left Coast anthem. It’s worth noting that the mandolin playing here (and in the aforementioned “Golden Girl”) is especially rousing and harkens back to The Byrds’ groundbreaking Sweethearts Of The Rodeo. This is perhaps because the fellow playing that instrument is none other than Chris Hillman, who used to be in The Byrds. It’s perfectly fitting that a fellow with that lineage is aboard for these songs to pass the country-rock torch.

A few weeks after I was sent this album, one of I See Hawks’ main men — Paul Lacques — called to make sure a) that I got the record and b) that I knew that there was a political track on it. I had and I didn’t. This little life lesson here to impart is if you want someone to know something, tell them.

I didn’t realize right away that “Byrd From West Virginia” was about the Senator Robert Byrd. Apart from the lyrics — which I’ll get to — the song has a stirring, majestic quality with a melody and harmonies that resonate deep into American country and folk traditions. It’s like an A&E Biography episode distilled down to five minutes. It even finds a way to address Byrd’s early racist attitudes: “He burned the cross of Jesus in the West Virginia night/The darkness of America blinded his sight.” Among the landmarks along the way are glimpses of The Great Depression, Byrd’s marriage to a coal miner’s daughter (Loretta Lynn has nothing on him) and his hard work in a shipyard. Further down the road, there’s even a Forrest Gump moment of colliding with people more famous than him: “As a young man in congress he studied law at night/For ten long years he burned a different light/Presented with his J.D. by John Fitzgerald Kennedy/Just before the young president was escorted into history.”

It climaxes some fifty years later with Byrd as the grand old man on the political landscape. I See Hawks can’t help but reveal their shared sense of indignation as they compellingly sing, “And when a reckless new president came calling out for war/Old Byrd from West Virginia sang out the score: ‘The doctrine of preemption is radical and deadly …'” And it tops all this off with these haunting words: “Who will sing this song when the Byrd flies away/Vanished oe’r the hillside at the end of the day/A long voice a crying, a lone voice a crying … Senator Byrd.” All people who make the world better by their presence deserve such a sendoff.

There are rumblings that the next I See Hawks album will have more topical songs on it, which is definitely something to look forward to. In the meantime, California Country will fit the bill as a prime example of the timeless California Country sound.

* * *

Tony Peyser writes political poems every day for BuzzFlash and draws editorial cartoons twice weekly. His new music column, The Blue State Jukebox, is now a monthly feature for BuzzFlash. Mr. Peyser (who loves referring to himself in the third person) is shamelessly using BuzzFlash as a springboard to help him land his dream job: becoming the new Washington Bureau Chief for Talon News.

L.A. Daily News: California Country Review

Three and A Half Out of Four Stars
Local co(s)mic cowboys serve up true sounds of ’60s country rock with a satirical bent that captures the surreal absurdity of life in our fair megalopolis. The Hawks’ hippie twang cred is emphasized by the appearance of Byrds/Burrito Brothers stalwart Chris Hillman, but they can also cook up a faux myth-rock inferno on the hilarious “Slash From Guns N’ Roses.” An eyes-wide-open ode to Sen. Robert Byrd and the caustic “Hard Times (Are Here Again)” provide contempo political counterpoint to Golden State narratives of passion crimes and spaced-out nostalgia. The Hawks play tonight at McCabe’s in Santa Monica.
By Bob Strauss, Staff Writer