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YO SATURNALIA AND HAPPY ''CHRISTMAS'' FROM THE SINGING SAWS

Who needs Burl Ives and Bing Crosby of Christmas when you have the bloody sickle of Saturn and the exploits of Caligula to celebrate?

Julian Koster
The Singing Saws at Christmastime
(Merge)

I am not a direct advocate of Christmas proper, but have come to fully embrace "Christmas." Like many, I found myself bummed to my rotten core at this most festive season, that people in cheery green and red sweater combinations with matching scarves, mirthfully sipping hot chocolate in your face would inspire seething rage in me.  My mood would tunnel into the metaphoric snow -I live in the South and are thus robbed of Christmas' postcard veneer - until spring would arouse it with the sensual fragrance of new life. Christmas was a miserable time.

So at some point, I pushed Christmas aside, acknowledging my incompatibilities with it and the unstoppable inertia of its approach and embraced "Christmas," a less-formal appreciation of humankinds' best and worst behaviors compressed into a season. I think not of poor baby Jesus freezing in the barn as sheepherders bring him, what... incense? No amount of Nag Champa is going to hide the circumstances there. I think of Saturnalia, the bloody, sensuous feast of Saturn, a badass among the Roman gods who attained power by castrating his father Ouranos with his trademark sickle.  His feast is marked with a week of gambling and orgies, sweaty times where slave and master often changed places and greeted one another with "Io Saturnalia"; io being pronounced as a jaunty yo!  Who needs Burl Ives and Bing Crosby of Christmas when you have the bloody sickle of Saturn and the exploits of Caligula to celebrate?

But my days of wine and blood rituals are long past me, so I keep a tinge of it as I celebrate "Christmas." I even acquiesced to my boss' desire to decorate the office for the season; the festooning of the clock in the above photo is my handiwork.  And, I can think of no better music to accompany this perversion-yet-adherence to holiday dicta than that of Julian Koster and his Singing Saw Orchestra. The former saw-man of Neutral Milk Hotel and member of The Music Tapes has done a simple thing on The Singing Saw at Christmastime - arranged the old standbys to his lonely instrument.  On this album, "O' Holy Night" becomes the plaintive supplication of a wolf, whimpering in the cold to the moon.  "Jingle Bells" is the winds, joining in on a melodious and celestial mew of quiet joy.

Singing saw - an actual handsaw bent and played with a bow - is not what you'd call a versatile instrument, but its haunting voice, more ghostly than even a Theremin is unmistakably effective at drawing you in. Koster does manage to shake things up on "Hark! The Herald Angels Sing" - literally; it sounds like chains and wind chimes are clattering in the breeze, but the wonderful hum of the saw still holds center stage. This fits my "Christmas" to a tee, combining detachment and engagement with the same fervor.  I am tempted, when my festooned clock in the hall proclaims it time to pack up for the winter break, to set The Singing Saw at Christmastime on repeat, just loud enough to seep under my locked door so that it may fill the abandoned halls with "Christmas" cheer.  Io Saturnalia! Happy "Christmas"!  And to all a good night.

Listen to it on lala.

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About the Author
Alex V. Cook,
Music Editor
Alex V. Cook listens to everything and writes about most of it. His latest book, the snappily titled Louisiana Saturday Night: Looking for a Good Time in South Louisiana's Juke Joints, Honky-Tonks, and Dance Halls is an odyssey from the backwoods bars and small-town dives to the swampside dance halls and converted clapboard barns of a Louisiana Saturday Night. Don't leave Heathrow without it. His first book Darkness Racket and Twang is available from SideCartel. The full effect can be had at alex v cook.com (biography/all stories)

 

 

MUSIC ARCHIVE

Our Band Could Be Your Business Model The Jesus Record, the Hail Mary, and the Arc of the Covenant Clean Living and the Point of Indie Rock Honey, Don't Walk Out on Drive-By Truckers White - Welcome to the Real World The Limit as x Approaches Tortoise Because We are all Like That: Mozart's Cosi Fan Tutte Depressing Dubliners, The XX Way Five Great Love Songs of 2009 (so far) Brotherhoods of Breath - Moroccan Sufi Trance Today The Kids Hate Dirty Projectors Crispy Pig Wilco: For Your Love Michael Jackson and plunderphonics Patterson Hood: Common Man as Hell Meet the Lemonheads' Tape Case Late for Church Bob Log III's Shit is Perfect Telepathe: The Sinister Side of The Real Bang Bang Kirk Kirk Kirk Does Rufus Rufus Rufus R.I.P. Jay Bennett Brinkley, Ark. and Other Assorted Love Songs : Bob Frank & John Murry It Hugs Back: They've Got It Imagine the Horrors 300 Words From London: Me, I'm All Smiles - Echo and the Bunnymen Live Creosote on my Soul Grand Duchy: I Got You, Babe My Love Re-explodes: The Dukes of Stratosphear return Micachu and Black Dice: Rip Up Your Love The Drones: Supercargo of Suffering Nostalgia Sweeping Away The Veils Preaching to the Choir: Phil Kline and Arvo Pärt Bow Wow Wow! - Mighty Doglude The Living Jandek Aural Dream Door; Debussy's Pelleas et Melisande Stop Me If You've Heard This Dinosaur Joke Before: Morrissey and U2 Goddamn Lonely Love: M. Ward, Lucinda Williams, and Jason Isbell Heralds of the Groove: The Budos Band Trading the Bellowed Anthems for the 60-cycle Hum
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