play_arrow

keyboard_arrow_right

Listeners:

Top listeners:

skip_previous skip_next
00:00 00:00
playlist_play chevron_left
volume_up
  • cover play_arrow

    Bombshell Radio – Now Playing Bombshell Radio 24-7

  • cover play_arrow

    Episode 504: Rainbow Country - Queer Defiant Unapologetic

  • cover play_arrow

    Stereo Embers The Podcast 0490: Robert Forster (The Go-Betweens) Alex Green Online

  • cover play_arrow

    Episode 655: Ice Cream Man Power Pop & More #646

play_arrow

Stereo Embers The Podcast 0243: Jerry Vessel (Red House Painters)

micAlex Green Onlinetoday22 October 2021 2

Background
  • cover play_arrow

    Stereo Embers The Podcast 0243: Jerry Vessel (Red House Painters) Alex Green Online


“Her Favourite Hitchcock Films”

A native of Northern California, Jerry Vessel was the bassist for the beloved San Francisco outfit Red House Painters. The band, who formed in 1989, put out four albums on 4AD and toured all over North America and Europe before calling it a day in 2001. Post-Painters, Vessel played drums for the Muons and bass for Six Eye Columbia and he also put out two solo albums under the moniker Heirlooms of August.
Heirlooms’ sophomore album Down at the 5-Star found one of the songs featured in the TV series Parenthood. Vessel’s third effort is under his own name this time around and it really makes sense. A stripped down affair that’s stark, spare, personal and unflinchingly honest, Her Favorite Hitchcock Films was written about his relationship with fashion designer Alexis O’Connell and it not only details their time together, it also confronts dealing with her sudden loss. Punctuated by piano violins, cellos, and atmospheric production courtesy of American Music Club’s Bruce Kaphan, the compositions on Her Favorite Hitchcock Films are as poetic as they are conversational. Beautifully constructed, they’re parenthetical, interstitial, referential and emotional. Name-checking Darby Crash, David Lynch, aluminum boats, Thelonious Monk, druid forts and Townes Van Zandt, the songs that make up this album are filled with lyrical intensity in that they conjure the world Vessel and O’Connell built and occupied together. When you’re close with someone you construct universes that are made up of the things you mutually love and this is a stirring homage to those universes. Yes, there’s darkness and of course, there’s pain here, but every song is charged with love. It’s vulnerable but in that vulnerability there’s tremendous life-affirming strength. It’s quite an album. And this is quite a conversation—Vessel talks to Alex about grief, his friendships with his former Red House Painters bandmates, Townes Van Zandt, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Jack London and why the piano was his go-to instrument this time around.

www.jerryvesselmusic.bandcamp.com
www.jerryvesselmusic.com
www.bombshell radio.com
www.alexgreenonline.com

Rate it