Eliza Gilkyson's canny human faith on display on latest album

September 7, 2018
Issue 
Eliza Gilkyson.

Secularia
Eliza Gilkyson
Red House Records
2018

In these whirling times of burning forests, unspeakable human rights violations and stupid White House tweets, it can seem like our minds are being sucked down a numbing vortex, into a voracious black hole — ā€œthe centre cannot holdā€.Ā 

Could there be light at the end of these darkest of days?Ā  Might we still feel joy and have hope, despite all pessimistic logic?

It might be possible listening to some fine revolutionary words and music — like in veteran Texas/New Mexico folk singer Eliza Gilkyson’s new album, Secularia (her 20th).

As they say, you gotta have heart. And maybe — just maybe — without any evident God at hand, could we still have a wee bit of faith? Some of us old agnostic rebels may admit to occasional bouts of that kind of reckless optimistic feeling, giddy though we may seem to be.

Eliza Gilkyson seems to feel that way, too. Sometimes.

In this, her stunning new (and 20th) album, the beloved singer-songwriter digs into and reworks literary, spiritual and musical traditions as she strives to express the almost inexpressible.

To this end, Gilkyson mines the many-voiced ancient folk tradition and some of her own recorded songs from years past, freshly revisited.Ā Ā 

She gets plenty of musical help in this project, from the likes of Shawn Colvin, the late, great Jimmy LaFave, Kym Warner, Chris Maresh, Warren Hood, Andre Moran, Mike Hardwick, Betty Soo, Don Richmond, Michael Hearne and the Tosca String Quartet of Tracy Seeger, Sara Nelson, Ames Asbell and Leigh Mahoney — to name a few of her musical collaborators.

This album is, in a sense, a concept album. It demands to be listened to, carefully, as a whole, an inter-connected, work of art. That said, each track has its charms.

The musical flow is both varied and seamless. But the true brilliance of this brilliant recording is in Gilkyson’s canny lyrics. They are at the same time conversational and profound.

So, what is the ā€œconceptā€ informing ā€œSeculariaā€? Not easy to say briefly without slipping into clichĆ©, and clichĆ©d is something this album is not.

Those fans who revelled in the hard-eyed, near-apocalyptic vision of Gilkyson’s 2014 song ā€œThe Great Correctionā€ (and its chilling video interpretation by her son Cisco Ryder Gilliland) know that Gilkyson is no cock-eyed sentimental dream-monger. She knows real politics and struggle — and she knows the good folks don’t always win, at least in the short term.

Her opening selection is a song based on the drily witty poem ā€œSolitary Singerā€, which was co-written in the 1940s by her grandmother Phoebe Hunter Gilkyson and dad Terry Gilkyson. It was deployed as the theme song for Terry’s slyly subversive night-time folk-music radio show.

It declares: ā€œDark comes down like a bird in flight/Most good people have gone to rest/But us poor folk who wake at night/When we’re lonely we sing our best ā€¦ā€ An insomniac’s anthem, the song ends with the ironic, repeated refrain: ā€œNobody’s listening.ā€

The next song, ā€œLifelinesā€, (co-written with Bellarosa Castillo) begins full-bore Yeatsian: ā€œThe centre cannot holdā€. But Eliza does not buy into WB Yeats’s fatalistic, even fascistic, doom-vision. Instead, her song ends with a ray of collective hope: ā€œEveryone must do their part/And hearts like life lines/Will light our way home in the dark/Moving into tomorrowā€¦ā€

ā€œConservationā€, another song based on a poem by Phoebe Hunter Gilkyson, recalls Percy Shelley’s bleak ā€œOzymandiasā€ but evolves into a sort of atheist hymn. Declaring, ā€œI have no god, no king or saviourā€, it ends with the singer asking that her dead bones be placed ā€œwith trees and birds and flowers aboundingā€ in such a way that ā€œthose who mourn may be comforted.ā€ What a generous way to contemplate one’s own final coming to rest.

ā€œIn the name of the Lordā€ skewers theocratic (and consumerist) rapacious imperialism.

ā€œDreamtimeā€ again invokes ā€œThe Second Comingā€ end-times mythos: ā€œSome kind of storm is coming/Some kind of veil about to fall.ā€

Yet even this grim foreboding is tempered by a guardedly hopeful lullaby of sorts for the coming generations: ā€œOh when the night comes on like this/I just pray there’ll be some kind of guiding light/When we cross over/ into dreamtimeā€¦ā€

Gilkyson, now a grandmother several times over, still has the courage to sing comfort to her (and our) little ones, despite the looming thunderheads.

ā€œSeculareā€, co-written with Mark Andes, is Gilkyson’s song of thanks and praise to the world that despite all its sorrows, and our own shortcomings, gives us children, songs, hope and ā€œthe fishes brown and silverā€. Truly a fit mantra for a singer who is also a devout catch-and-release fisherwoman.

ā€œReunionā€ is a fierce calling-out of a social order which tries to ignore the plight of immigrants and refugees: ā€œSee the trembling girls/Hear their desperate cries/On the sickening swells/Look into their eyesā€¦ā€ On another level, this song may be an angry cry from a conscious elder woman witnessing the atrocious sufferings revealed by the #MeToo movement and other no-longer-silent women.

ā€œSanctuaryā€, in which Gilkyson duets with gospel singer Sam Butler, is a touching affirmation of ā€œlove’s sanctuaryā€, that place where even we unbelievers may find solace. It is an especially beautiful song among many beauties on this album. ā€œThough my trust is gone and my faith not near/In love’s sanctuary/Thou art with me.ā€

ā€œThrough the Looking Glassā€ takes us in ā€œmajestic silenceā€ on a journey across ā€œdark watersā€ to where ā€œBeauty beckons like a pot of goldā€ in a striking re-visioning of John Keats’s romantic joy in ā€œOde on a Grecian Urnā€. It is a great upbeat song, and the line about ā€œthe great devotion gameā€ surely tempers Eliza’s grimmer view of ā€œThe Great Correctionā€ that is undeniably near at hand.

ā€œEmmanuelleā€, with its title’s sly gender reversal of one of the male Biblical names of God, is this album’s enthralling prayerful feminist epic, with its rolling march-time and humbly self-referential, self-realisational candor: ā€œA rock, a star, a drunk in a bar … pushing the will like a rock up a hill/Until, until, until … from out of dreams awakening it seems ten thousand years … Emmanuelle?ā€ A woman finding herself, and herselves, at long last. And happy to find love in her own true heart.

Gilkyson and her friend, Jimmy LaFave, the great folk artist who died last year, take us on a joy-ride with the grand old rouser ā€œDown By the Riversideā€, with a few telling adjustments to the traditional lyrics: ā€œI would sacrifice my starry crown/Down by the riverside/If I could only tear this building downā€¦ā€Ā 

It’s a call to rise from a pair of tough peaceful warriors.Ā  And a damned great song to boot.

The album ends with the quiet grace of ā€œInstrumentā€, a piano and guitar tune whose lyrics seem to be in quest of redemption, however unlikely that may seem in such a fallen world. Yet, Gilkyson sees hope in the rending mercy of nature: ā€œCome strike my final tones/And blow your horn magnificent/Through the hollows of my bones.ā€

Secularia is Eliza Gilkyson’s masterpiece. It will be played joyfully by doubtful but hopeful wanderers in this wide world long after the singer herself has moved on.

But that will be then, and this is now. It will be a real joy to catch Gilkyson in concert and sing along on these great songs.

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