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I See Hawks In L.A.'s "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.

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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.

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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.
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