Or, the Whale

Or, the Whale

The Old Creakings Are Conversations About The Abyss

Oct 29, 2009

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

Wind whips blindly through the trees and the summer sun turns winter's freeze as we enter into the thick and cavernous world of rumination and driftwood that San Francisco band Or, The Whale find to be the most charming and friendly. There are concrete souls and dead dogs breaking hearts, splitting those souls into sections. There are empty country roads and straying minds, getting off the beaten path and carrying themselves away on ethers and thrums. There are countless characters who are doing their very bests to stay afloat and to make sense out of the twistedness and fog. There are house and life-losing wildfires stealing things back and there are monumental floods that are essentially doing the same thing - cleaning these helpless people's clocks and leaving them to their limp and searching puzzlement. One of the group's best songs on a solid self-titled sophomore record is "Keep Me Up," a tune that really gets into the neurosis of everything that can be tossed and turned over, all that can cause you to lose your appetite and forget about providing your body with the nourishment or the sunlight that it needs to not just shrivel up and be gone. The lives that Lindsay Garfield and Alex Robins and Julie Thomasson sing about in Or, The Whale songs are fraught with problems and concerns that aren't unlike the common cold - we're all bound to become infirm with them seasonally, regularly, without so much fail. They are going to get us sooner or later and at those times, the only hopes that there can be are that we'll hold up - that we're steeled enough not to just topple over, to blow away into the nasty skies or that we're sound enough in our fibers to just let that immune system do what it has to do to fight it all off. But it's still only just until the next time. There are always new troubles - or the recurring ones - for those in Or, The Whale songs and they are greeted with a disciplined and crackly like a harvestable field of corn sound that recalls a Laurel Canyon sound, or something that the old cowboys of California would have spent their evenings dining on a can of baked beans cooked over an open fire, in the can, listening to contentedly. As the three sing on "Keep Me Up," "The joys of life that sorry brings/Like bees to flowers, flies to shit/The never-ending pull to it," it's evident that there's really no winning to be had out there. It's just a world operating as it will operate now and forever, not caring what kind of fleas it has on its hide. It will shake and it will buck and it's everyone else's job not to get thrown off or get hurt too badly so that they can hurl a boot back into the stirrup and clamor back onto it. It's a lot of leading by instincts and it's a lot of catching the howling winds in our chests and trying to decipher what they're really trying to say to us. It's about feeling all of the creaky boards of an old house and realizing that it's a conversation with the dead and you. It's about shaking your head and just riding it out into that blind terror. It's the undulating winter weather, summer weather, spring weather and autumnal weather that Or, The Whale laps up.

Or, The Whale Official Site
Seany Records

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  • Or, they are really good, really. Thanks, Daytrotter!

    eastcoastmamma | Saturday, December 12, 2009 | 5:55 am

  • good stuff. great to pass out to

    circleofwill | Friday, November 13, 2009 | 3:08 pm

  • Justin, your illustration makes you look like a white michael jordan hahahah....and Matt has a Justin Timberlake thing going on... See these guys live! I have many a time and have never been let down

    Anonymous | Wednesday, November 04, 2009 | 9:09 am

  • very nice - Or, the Whale certainly leap out of the water

    redweb | Monday, November 02, 2009 | 10:05 am

  • Jayhawks and 'Truckers had a love child -- this is it. American Recordings woulda loved these dudes to tour with early Black Crowes...

    migstardo | Saturday, October 31, 2009 | 9:03 am

  • great session! never heard of them before but they sound really good.

    chinowong22 | Saturday, October 31, 2009 | 7:48 am

  • good. like popcorn. delicious.

    lostinthedam | Thursday, October 29, 2009 | 11:19 am

  • Love this band. Saw them at SXSW earlier this year and they were great.

    Rosseus | Thursday, October 29, 2009 | 10:56 am

  • ;)*

    milli | Thursday, October 29, 2009 | 10:30 am

Songs by Or, the Whale

  1. first song

    Welcome to Daytrotter

    Download Or, the Whale playing Welcome to Daytrotter
  2. second song

    Datura

    Download Or, the Whale playing Datura

    - original version appears on Or, The WhaleIs a laidback country jam inspired by the roadside psychedelic favored by Carlos Casteneda.

  3. third song

    Rusty Gold

    Download Or, the Whale playing Rusty Gold

    - original version appears on Or, The WhaleIs an anthemic slow burner, rich in vocal harmonies and mid-tempo twang. An eagle soaring over the mountains of circumstance.

  4. fourth song

    Keep Me Up

    Download Or, the Whale playing Keep Me Up

    - original version appears on Or, The WhaleIs a dark reflection on the things we notice in life. "No Quarter" with moaning pedal steel.

  5. fifth song

    Never Coming Out

    Download Or, the Whale playing Never Coming Out

    - original version appears on Or, The WhaleIs a claustrophobic tale set to a churning shuffle and sweet vocal theatrics.

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