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Ha Ha Tonka

Ha Ha Tonka

The Fires Mean Harm

Oct 23, 2009

Words by Sean Moeller
Illustration by Johnnie Cluney
Sound engineering by Mike Gentry

  1.  
    Welcome to Daytrotter
  2.  
    Hold My Feet To The Fire original version appears on Novel Sounds of the Nouveau South This tune could possibly be considered our first foray into sadism.   As a result, lyrically we were able to tie in a Joel Chandler Harris reference.
  3.  
    Walking On The Devil's Back… original version appears on Novel Sounds of the Nouveau South This one attempts to tie the fervor of Pentecostal spirit-possession with the tragic inability to ever reach the "promised land." It is also meant to remind us that the will of God is often delivered in brutal campaigns against those who do not acquiesce to it. "the holy ghost, brother it's a weapon"

    On a side note, the Devil's Backbone is a trail near where I grew up.
  4.  
    The Outpouring original version appears on Novel Sounds of the Nouveau South Centers on a daydream I had about the Topeka Outpouring of 1901...and a story my Dad told me about going to a revivalist meeting (just as a spectator).
  5.  
    Close Every Valve To Your B… original version appears on Novel Sounds of the Nouveau South Feeling the loss of missed opportunities and stewing over it with a good friend…if you want to add to your depression, read Dostovesky

Whereas this Springfield, Missouri band's last record seemed to be one of midnight drinking parties and corn wine slugged back by the bottle, Ha Ha Tonka take us up onto the mount on "Novel Sounds of the Nouveua South," getting knee-deep in philosophies, spirituals and all matters that could mean salvation or damnation. It's a thicker piece to chew through and it's just as satisfying as the barn burners and recklessness of those more rip-roaring songs of people of the Ozarks having the kind of fun that people of the Ozarks have. The wise men that the band seems to consult at the top of this tip are people just like them, those in flannels and scruffy boots, just a bit further on in years - grandfathers and octogenarians who have been through it all, the great war, women by the bunches, children and grandchildren, crisis after crisis and rebounded from all of it with heavier and headier hearts and souls. They give them excellent advice or impart the kinds of long-winded stories that get boiled down into timeless anecdotes that are carried from generation to generation. These songs are about finishing off lives the right way or just finishing them off - getting to the end and not really getting a chance to reflect, just melt away. They are more sober and introspective, offering a side of someone that doesn't often get lit up or acknowledged. There are vices hinted at and there are lost nights whispered about, and there are all of these angry fires licking at the backsides and feet of the protagonists in these songs. The fires mean harm, but somehow everyone stays just clear enough from them to make it onto the next round, where there are bound to be more fires, just different fires. Lead singer Brian Roberts has an agitation and restlessness to his singing that informs all of the group's songs with an extra number of degrees of temperature, all the better to explore the spectacles that people make of their lives when they feel that's necessary. He sings, "Gonna tie one on tonight," on "Close Every Valve To Your Bleeding Heart," and it's getting us down and into the inner sanctum of where most of the songs on "Novel Sounds" seem to come from, this area that happens to be just far enough removed from where our sanity or our own personal grasp of it allows us to go and that next drop down, into the wing of utter craziness and darkness that has the devil to thank for its amenities. It's a thrilling plunge and there's complimentary moonshine for all as the elevator continues to sink below the surface. Roberts and Ha Ha Tonka take us to a place that forces a man to examine what he's got to show for how he's lived - maybe even long before he needs to consider his legacy or atonement - and then listening to those bearded old men with their pipes and seeing if they can help them out of any of the messes they've created. Or, if the mess is one that couldn't have been altered for the life of them, just they'll just chalk it up to natural causes and they'll head to the bar for some kind of casual nightcap. 

Ha Ha Tonka's Official Site
Ha Ha Tonka's Debut Daytrotter Session
Bloodshot Records

Session Comments

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  1. I like the write up =) mackenziesticks Thursday, November 05, 2009 1:31 am
  2. Love these guys, to date my favorite concert was seeing Ha Ha Tonka, and another Daytrotter favorite Someone Still Loves You Boris Yeltsin in Springfield, MO. WilderDude Tuesday, November 03, 2009 2:37 pm
  3. Remind me of Kings of Leon's earlier stuff. Pure raw power and aggression. Fantastic. Definitely gonna keep an eye out for these guys Smidge Tuesday, November 03, 2009 7:40 am
  4. Outstanding. sary Saturday, October 31, 2009 7:56 am
  5. That lyric "Gonna tie one on tonight" is actually from the song"Close every valve to your bleeding Heart" not "Walking on the Devils Backbone" hippiesmurphy Wednesday, October 28, 2009 7:07 pm
  6. Best band I've heard in good long time. They've got the whole package - great vibe, thoughtful lyrics, relevance, authenticity, and you can dance to it. Hope they stick around and keep it up. Anonymous Tuesday, October 27, 2009 7:47 pm
  7. Love the bookends on this session. jfike Monday, October 26, 2009 12:08 pm
  8. i sure do like this band. jeremy brock Sunday, October 25, 2009 9:27 pm
  9. Likes this. coocoobarabajagel Saturday, October 24, 2009 7:02 pm
  10. I think the transfer of those gospel harmonies into the true, raw rock and roll shows the versatility of this band. It impresses me when a band can meld two forms of great music into one successfully. An example of a band who can do this is Dawes, another daytrotter favorite. They meld the blues and rock as they were meant to be. timthenews Saturday, October 24, 2009 10:31 am
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