Review: Neko Case – Hell-On

Singer-songwriter Neko Case has been through a lot in the last five years.  The biggest calamity was that her home in Vermont burned to the ground while she was recording in Sweden.  The loss and enlightenment that fire brought to her were the inspiration for much of her new record, Hell-On.  Even the album’s cover has her wearing a crown of cigarettes while a blazing tar fire burns on her shoulder.

The title track opens the record and has Case boldly stating, “God is not a contract or a guy….God is a lusty tire fire.”  Nature, much like Case, cannot be controlled.  You shouldn’t even try.  “Nothing quite so poison as a promise,” she warns.  Just sit back and listen.  You’ll come through this song (and the whole record) with respect and an altered perspective for her, nature, detachment, and femininity.

“Last Lion of Albion” is one of Case’s many songs about nature, animals, and the importance of protecting both.  The beats and acoustic guitar riffs are wonderful throughout it, but they (like most everything else) can barely keep up with Case’s expert vocals and assuredness.  “Halls of Sarah” encourages women to stand strong in the times of #MeToo (and check out that saxophone solo!).

“Bad Luck” is the song Case wrote after her house and barn turned into ashes.  It’s surprisingly upbeat and is an anthem for standing up when you’re knocked to the ground.  The song ends with Case stating, “I died and went to work.”  You take the loss, and you move on.  The past is gone so take the moment now and run with it.  “Curse of the I-5 Corridor” is a stunning showcase for Case’s voice as she sings, “I miss the smell of mystery.” and tells the story of a woman who left home with a fake I.D. and wandered in and out of relationships, one night stands, and life in general until she meets up with a former lover in old age when they both might be mad and facing death.  It’s one of her best.

“Gumball Blue” has Case singing about the trappings of fame, “Dirty Diamond” seems to be an ode to the (currently) necessary evil of petroleum, and “Oracle of the Maritimes” is a lovely story of fishermen, lost love, and the dangers of the sea.  I love how “Winnie” (a song about love among women) starts off with a quick four-count drumstick tap and then switches to a sultry bass groove that moves like a bathrobe being slowly dropped to the bedroom floor.

Case includes her cover of Eric Bachmann‘s “Sleep All Summer” (a song that, as the story goes, made her pull over her car and weep the first time she heard it) with Bachmann performing a duet with her is another stunner about lost love.  Guests artists are all over this record.  K.D. LangBeth DittoMark LaneganCarl NewmanKatherine Calder, and John Collins are just a few (the last three are bandmates with Ms. Case in the New Pornographers) who provide guest vocals, production, and instrumentation to various tracks.

“Black is blue if I say it is,” Case sings on “My Uncle’s Navy” – a story about a relative she admired for his strength and resolve.  The album closes with “Pitch or Honey,” in which she admits, “I use major chords to make this a sadder song…An effective manipulation.”  She’s right.  It works.  “I wrote this song for me, and now I let it go.  From the island of the Texaco, I release it into the custody of my huckleberry friend.  Am I making pitch or honey?”  I love the idea of Case embracing detachment yet still wondering if her work is any good.  It’s the curse of any artist.  Being satisfied with our work is a rarity, but we know we have to release it to someone sooner or later.

Case detached from many things while making this record, some literal (her house and many possessions) and some metaphorical (things from her past that she hadn’t yet fully sent down the river).  Hell-On is another beautiful work from a master of her craft and one of the strongest voices in music today.

Keep your mind open.

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