Album Review: John Carpenter’s Lost Themes

John Carpenter’s Lost Themes
Review by Blake Madden

If you aren’t already a fan of John Carpenter’s films or the themes he’s composed for them, then the introduction of new “lost” ones probably isn’t going to change your mind. In the musical world of 2015 – with every nuance of tone, beat, and style possible – Carpenter’s bombastic arpeggiating synths, hair-metal guitar-tones, and truck-driving anthems of a 1980s future may seem a bit flat – the kind of thing you’d hear playing as a demo for a new synth or version of Pro Tools at Guitar Center.

For the Carpenter completist, however, Lost Themes is a continuation of his singular musical style, one initially forged out of necessity (Carpenter never had money to pay for a professional film score) that eventually became part of the filmmaker’s identity. It’s also a none-too-late realization of his original dream of making music for its own sake, one that has inspired the old dog to some new tricks.

Like his movies, Carpenter’s music is blunt and lean, focused on moving quickly from one backdrop and emotion to the next. Hooks are abundant, ‘nuance’ is for people with bigger budgets. He is the rare artist with perhaps not enough style to match his substance, more than once comparing his own scores to carpeting: “I’m there to support the scene and not get in the way and not annoy you. I put down a nice carpet on your floor so you can walk comfortably and enjoy yourself. That’s my job.”

A lifetime of DIY filmmaking, a forty-year ‘beating’ as Carpenter calls it, will keep you humble and pragmatic. But the beating has taken its toll. Carpenter the filmmaker has slowed to a crawl in the last decade and a half, giving us only 2001’s Ghosts of Mars and 2010’s The Ward, a decline he attributes directly to the exhausting nature of his profession. With his focus removed from films and in a pressure-free environment – working alongside his son Cody and godson Daniel Davies in a basement – Carpenter the musician has re-emerged to record his first ever official album.

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Lost Themes (Sacred Bones Records)

Through the opening piano chords and singed guitar lines of album opener “Vortex,” you can almost make out Jack Burton’s Pork Chop Express climbing over another hill on another dark and stormy night, ready to do battle with the forces of darkness. Or Snake Plissken escaping from another maximum-security prison-state (has to be Florida this time). Carpenter isn’t aping his greatest hits so much as leading us to imagine new movies around these themes, movies that, given Carpenter’s advancing age and growing distaste for the process, we’ll likely never see.

While “Vortex” is classic Carpenter, follow-up “Obsidian” immediately gives way to what could be seen as ‘new school’ Carpenter: updated toys, some youthful collaborators who can see a computer screen much better than he can, and plenty of space to work with. Free from the constraints of a film score, Carpenter opens up both his melodic range and arsenal of sounds. Heavy drumming – either recorded live or programmed – abounds on songs like “Obsidian,” “Domain” and “Purgatory.” In place of actors’ dialogue, ghostly synth leads and guitars call and respond back to each other, and multiple synth voices build into multi-layered soundscapes, more overblown than what you might hear in his films.

Each “song” seems to have several movements within it, sometimes only loosely related to each other. We even get rare glimpses of Carpenter in ‘band-riff’ mode, notably on songs like “Domain,” where we’re suddenly transported to the 1983 World Arm Wrestling Championships. It’s simultaneously a bit hokey and a good example of Carpenter’s unpretentious charm: he has forever gotten the most out of tools he’s never quite learned how to use properly.

Which brings us back to the original question of the uninitiated: Can this music (all instrumental) and without a film actually survive and prosper without any other context? Luckily Carpenter has never tried to coax those baloney horn sounds out of his synths, but you would hope that over the years he’d learned to spend a few extra minutes editing his strings, choirs, and leads. It isn’t the case; most still have that stock sound of a not-bad-not-good commercial synth of whatever era he’s in. There aren’t any ‘production’ values or aesthetics to speak of on the album. Even now, and with total freedom, Carpenter is still trying to lay carpet, and still looking over his shoulder while doing so.

Asking or expecting Carpenter to change his spots at this point is moot, and it’s certainly nitpicky for fans already in Carpenter’s pocket. Believe me, I’m one of them. I just wonder if a newer generation will miss out on Carpenter’s idiosyncratic minimalism (they sure love the Drivesoundtrack), his pulsing moodiness, and his melodic twists and turns because they can’t get past that initial ‘band in a box’ sound. Carpenter is too old to care; he’ll never get mistaken for Spielberg or John Williams, so he’ll have to settle for being some weird hybrid of the two, on a shoestring budget till the day he dies. Now he’s indulging a muse he’s kept literally in the background for forty years. I’ll forgive him a bell sound here or there and instead long for all the great non-existent John Carpenter movies these themes could easily belong to.

Photos: Nine Inch Nails & Soundgarden w/Cold Cave @ White River Ampitheatre

How the music gods got this lineup together, I do not know. What a lucky person you were if you got to see Nine Inch Nails and Soundgarden together at White River Ampitheatre last summer. Sometimes really good things happen! Soundgarden fans can rejoice that the group will release Echo of Miles, featuring all rarities, on May 19th, while Nine Inch Nails’ Trent Reznor recently collaborated with Atticus Ross on the soundtrack for Gone Girl. Los Angeles’ Cold Cave opened. All photos by Monica Martinez:

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Nine Inch Nails

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Soundgarden

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Cold Cave

What to Expect this Year: Capitol Hill Block Party 2015

The Pike/Pine corridor may be rapidly shape-shifting, but in the spirit of this acclaimed locale, Capitol Hill remains a target of revelry. So why not throw tribute to an evolving neighborhood at the CHBP? The partial line-up just got dropped with bands who cultivated owner/producer Jason Lajeunnesse’s grassroots beginning. You know you love Built to Spill, Shabazz Palaces, Chastity Belt, and Slow Bird right? What about RATATAT, Kinski, TV On The Radio, Julie Ruin or The Kills! Here is the deal: Get your tickets ASAP because 3-day passes are only $99 through April 2. More ticket info available here.

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Also, check out these never before seen snaps of last year.

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all photos by Marz

Photos: SXSW 2015 in Austin, Texas

Back from my annual pilgrimage to Austin. SXSW seemed to get back to its roots this year – lack of huge names and more emerging performers. Armed with my camera, here’s how I’ve summed up a few of this year’s artists …

Best New Find – Natalie Prass (made a point of seeing her twice)
Best Swedish Accent – Tove Lo (Tove Stryke was a strong contender)
Bluest Eyes – Rainey Qualley
Reddest Hair – Lauren St. Janes
Most Photogenic – Zella Day (former model)
Most Energetic Performance – Ryn Weaver
Most Photographed – Lenka (this was my ninth time)
Most Twang – Nikki Lane (she’ll be in Seattle in May)
Looking Forward To Seeing The Most – Sam Pinkerton (discovered her music last year)

1 Courtney Barnett

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Courtney Barnett

2 Tove Lo

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Tove Lo

5 Laura Marling

6 Laura Marling
Laura Marling

7 The Ting Tings

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The Ting Tings

9 Lenka

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Lenka

11 Angel Olsen

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Angel Olsen

13 Natalie Prass

14 Natalie Prass
Natalie Prass

15 Nikki Lane

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Nikki Lane

17 Zella Day

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Zella Day

18a Ryn Weaver

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Ryn Weaver

19 Ibeyi
Ibeyi

20 Orla Gartland

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Orla Gartland

22 Tove Styrke

23 Tove Styrke
Tove Styrke

24 Sam Pinkerton

25 Sam Pinkerton
Sam Pinkerton

25a Laura Welsh

25b Laura Welsh
Laura Welsh

26 Charlotte OC

27 Charlotte OC
Charlotte OC

28 Demi Louise

29 Demi Louise
Demi Louise

30 Kristin Diable

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Kristin Diable

32 VÉRITÉ

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VÉRITÉ

34 Joseph
Joseph

35 Jess Williamson

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Jess Williamson

37 Emmy The Great

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Emmy The Great

39 Mickey Guyton

40 Mickey Guyton
Mickey Guyton

41 Chelsea Lankes

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Chelsea Lankes

43 Rainey Qualley

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Rainey Qualley

45 Lauren St. Janes

46 Lauren St. Janes
Lauren St. Janes

Photos: New Politics @ the Neptune

New Politics, the entirely fabulous trio from Denmark, excited a massive/sold-out audience back in November, 2014. This is one of my favorite groups, and it was wonderful to see so many people going wild over them. With breakdancing moves from singer David Boyd, maniacal antics from guitarist Søren Hansen, and hazardous (yet solid) drumming from Louis Vecchio, as a live act, they’re thrilling. Look at all those people grabbing Boyd!

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New Politics – all photos by Dagmar

More Photos of New Politics @ the Neptune