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Anaïs Mitchell
Live wire
Anaïs Mitchell was raised on a sheep farm in Vermont, and
her songs have the freshness of deep, unsullied nature. I don't
think I've ever heard songs quite like this: twisty and melodic
and somehow effortlessly literate, steeped in traditional folk but
eager to comment on the shiny, scary problems of this modern age.
At twenty-five, Mitchell has had a quarter century to ponder her
life as a musician, if, indeed, she started at birth, which seems
entirely possible. She says, "I used to tell people I wanted
to be a journalist. There is a lonely egotism and self-composure
to journalists. Not unlike artists, they're always traveling,
always writing, loving their loneliness, feeling somehow that they
have their finger on the pulse worshipping the truth and
trying to render it legible."
Fox News journalists notwithstanding, it was a lofty goal. One
wonders, listening to songs off Mitchell's two records, The
Brightness (2007) and Hymns for the Exiled (2004), whether what
she's doing these days touring the country playing venues
big and small, writing about what she sees and feels, crafting
berblogs about life and books and politics and self and other
isn't far off.
Mitchell started writing at seventeen. Her college years, during
which she studied languages and world politics and traveled to the
Middle East, Europe, and Latin America, proved the springboard for
a fine nosegay of songs. She recorded her first record, The Song
They Sang
.
.
.
When Rome Fell (now out of print), in Austin in 2002 in a single
afternoon. Then came a win at the Kerrville Folk Festival's
prestigious New Folk competition in 2003, and then presto!
a call from Ani DiFranco with an invite to join her label,
Righteous Babe Records. Nice.
Some of Mitchell's songs sound as though they first lived
as poems, maybe scratched in a notebook with a Bic pen that skipped,
or with crayons, each word a different color. This is not to say
that the music feels pasted on; it doesn't. But there's a
wonderful airiness to the way Mitchell's language, melody, and
guitar interrelate. When she asks her challenging, rhetorical
little questions in the superb "Cosmic American," she
answers them at the same time, and in all kinds of ways. Her voice
is at once gentle and piercing, simple and tripping as she sings:
I'm a live wire, I'm a shortwave radio, do you copy?
I'm a flash of light from the radar tower to the runway
If I leave you I'm gonna do it semi-automatically
Do you blame me? Do you blame me?
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Anaïs Mitchell plays the Ark on Tuesday, October 16.
Whit Hill
[Review published October 2007]
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