Since
its inception in the late nineties, American Mars has been a musical
anomaly in their hometown of Detroit. In a town often passed over by
touring Americana acts and dominated by garage and punk, the band
has persevered for nearly a decade with its unique brand of
atmospheric roots-influenced rock. On January 15, the group will
release its third full-length record, "Western Sides", on
Gangplank Records.
American Mars’ 2003 release, "No
City Fun", combined indie-rock elements with Eno/Lanois-influenced
soundscapes. Reviewers compared the band’s music to such diverse
artists as Joe Henry, the Dream Syndicate, Tom Petty, and Blue Nile
while their emotional and cathartic live shows earned them support
slots for 16 Horsepower, The National, Clem Snide, Tim Easton,
Elbow, Magnolia Electric Company, and The Black Heart Procession.
On the group’s new record, American
Mars has embraced a more direct approach to both songwriting and its
sense of theme and place. Western Sides covers ample ground
in its 11 songs, from the lonesome grace of “Long Walk Home,” to
the cutting defiance of “Democracity,” and the whispered elegy
of “Sunray,” but under the direction of the band’s pedal steel
player and producer David Feeny (Blanche, Loretta Lynn, The White
Stripes), the band’s ranging impulses are brought together to
create something more than the sum of its songs.
Lyrically, Western Sides finds singer/songwriter Thomas
Trimble exploring the themes of fidelity, fear, and desire through
the eyes of characters wrestling with the baffling extremes of
everyday life. Says Trimble, “I’ve always been interested in
lyrics that find mystery in the everyday like ‘Norwegian Wood,’
or ‘You Still Believe in Me,’ from Pet Sounds. Most pop
songs I hear today just sound so unbelievable but I realize that at
the end of day we all want songs to take us somewhere outside
ourselves so that’s what I was going for with a lot of the lyrics
on this record.”
If Western Sides is the sound of a
band exploring new ground, part of the explanation may be found in
the personal journey its members had to make getting there.
Recording for the record began in the fall of 2003 on the heels of
the band’s last shows in support of No City Fun and their
appearance at South by Southwest. Sessions halted in early 2004,
however, when bassist Garth Girard was diagnosed with colon cancer.
As a result, the band’s attention turned to assisting Garth and
his family through his surgery, treatment and recovery. Band members
David Feeny and Thomas Trimble helped raise over $2500 for Garth’s
family by running in Detroit’s annual marathon and the band added
a page to its website where friends and fans could post their
well-wishes. Garth was given a clean bill of health in 2006, and the
band soon returned to writing and recording material with a renewed
sense of mission and appreciation for each other and their music.
Juniper Tar's Jason Mohr and Aaron
Schleicher started playing songs in a small bedroom with an
acoustic guitar and a snare drum, an idea spawned from a
conversation that took place three years prior on a porch in Los Angeles.
A couple years later, Tuc Krueger
left his job at Guitar Player Magazine in San Francisco to return
home to the Midwest. Aaron's brother Ryan had just been forced to
evacuate his home in New Orleans in light of Hurricane Katrina,
forcing his return to Milwaukee as a refugee.