
Los
Angeles, California boasts some of the most transcendent sunsets on Planet
Earth. Beatific, swirling miasmas of deep color culled from some distant,
holy palette. But before we get carried away, it’s important to
remember that the sunsets of Los Angeles would be nothing without the
thousands of noxious chemicals that blanket the greater San Fernando region.
L. A. sunsets look that way because of the smog.
This is perhaps the most telling piece of ephemeral trivia about Los
Angeles, which is, arguably, the most reviled city in the country. There
IS beauty here, hiding amongst the rows of stretch Hummer limousines and
gargantuan saline breast implants. But it is a complicated beauty, one
born of an incredibly unique environment and one that flourishes against
all odds.
The Elected have taken some of these cosmic contradictions that fuel
Los Angeles and made a record that is simultaneously timeless in its themes
and incredibly personal and specific in its execution. Grand anthems give
way to delicate and unambiguous reflections on love and loss. Ultimately,
The Elected have made a record of complicated beauty.
Music-geeks and cultural historians have made a lot of noise throughout
the years about the fabled sunny-‘60s “California Sound”
embodied by psychedelic wild-west harmonies and ocean-soaked pop. Of course,
the history of the true California sound is far more bleak – from
Gram Parsons’ legendary desert cremation; to David Crosby snorting
literal mountains of coke up his nose in Laurel Canyon; to Brian Wilson
going into a surreal hibernation after a complete meltdown.
In spirit and sound, The Elected carry on in the tradition of this true
California sound, where beauty is complicated and nothing can be taken
at face value. They trade in the realm of songs that somehow manage to
sound simultaneously timeless and like nothing you’ve ever heard
before.
Singer/guitarist Blake Sennett is also the co-singer/songwriter of Rilo
Kiley, and his songs on Me First are like anecdotes told between friends
on car trips, or loaded late-night confessions, or handwritten letters
from estranged loved ones. With his backing band (Mike Bloom on lead guitar,
Daniel Brummell on bass, and Jason Boesel on drums) the songs become epic
sagas of haunting beauty. They are snapshots gone widescreen; whispers
in surround-sound.
One day this past week, I took a walk around my neighborhood. I chose
The Elected album on my iPod, and wandered around. And then the sun started
to set, smearing rich swatches of unearthly magenta and gold across the
sky. As I paused to admire it, a passing bus exhaled a thick cloud of
jet-black carbon monoxide right in my face. I coughed, and laughed, and
The Elected was the perfect soundtrack for it.
~ Ben Boyer,
Hollywood, CA 10/31/03 |