Jackie-O Motherfucker
Flags Of The Sacred Harp
Label ©  Atp
Release Year  2005
Length  1:10:10
Genre  Experimental Rock
Personal Star Rating [1-5]  
  Ref#  J-0049
Bitrate  (various) Kbps
  Other  
  Info  
    Track Listing:
      1.  
      Nice One  
       10:18  
      2.  
      Rockaway  
       4:25  
      3.  
      Hey! Mr. Sky  
       6:47  
      4.  
      Spirits  
       16:14  
      5.  
      Good Morning Kaptain  
       5:53  
      6.  
      Loud And Mighty  
       10:25  
      7.  
      The Louder Roared The Sea  
       16:08  
    Additional info: | top
      Jackie-O Motherfucker
      Flags of the Sacred Harp
      [ATP; 2005]
      Rating: 8.1

      The Sacred Harp is the title of an American songbook first published in 1844 that collected hundreds of traditional hymns and anthems dating back to Colonial times. Passed down by oral tradition, these polyphonic songs were meant to be sung a cappella by choirs, and were written using a unique four shape-note notation. This simplified manner of notation was created to encourage active participation, emphasizing an inclusive sense of community over performance. For their fifth album Flags of the Sacred Harp, the Portland-based collective Jackie-O Motherfucker use the lessons of The Sacred Harp and other traditional blues and gospel sources as a point of disembarkation. On these seven tracks, the group patiently unravel their source material's tangled threads, respooling them into wondrously evocative yet deeply personalized new devotionals.

      Over the course of their now decade-plus career, J-OMF have often incorporated American folkloric material into their free-form experiments, most memorably on 2000's Fig. 5, which included reconfigured versions of the traditional hymns "Go Down, Old Hannah" and "Amazing Grace". On Flags of the Sacred Harp, however, the group has more fully internalized and distilled the grammar of its blues and gospel influences, so that throughout the album identifiable scraps of melody or lyrics continually surface then re-submerge into the music's bubbling depths. And though the album was over a year in the making, there is nothing labored in the group's delivery. Each of these extended, luminous pieces issues forth with an unhurried grace as though simply tapped from an already existent wellspring.

      Throughout the group's lifespan, Jackie-O Motherfucker has undergone several personnel shifts, and is here pared to a quartet that includes founder Tom Greenwood, Nudge vocalist Honey Owens, and guitarist Adam Forkner, who has also played with Yume Bitsu and Devendra Banhart. But as with traditional Sacred Harp singing, the emphasis here is on group interplay and exploration rather than individual voices. Gentle opener "Nice One", though not a cappella, commences with Greenwood and Owens locked in a mesmeric vocal roundelay, before radiant amp feedback and cymbal swirls gradually permit the song's structure to loosen particle by particle. In contrast, the following "Rockaway" is as straightforward a country blues as the group have ever cut, with lyrics ("tombstone is my pillow/ graveyard's gonna be my bed") that allude to Blind Willie McTell's "Death Room Blues", among other folk blues classics. "Hey Mr. Sky" does the same for Charley Patton's "Pony Blues", although the words are carried heavenward by a full armload of rippling acid guitar.

      Standing center is the 16-minute sculpted drone of "Spirits", a steadily ascendant instrumental excursion that contains the album's least overt traditional references, conducting its worship instead through cryptic ceremony and unmoored electricity. As the album progresses, however, the skies grow increasingly darker, with tracks like "Good Morning Kaptain" and "The Louder Roared The Sea" recasting the language of the hymnal to express a vague, encroaching dread rather than faith. Yet still the group's music-- a mass of splintered guitar, percussion, harmonica, and indistinct voices-- remains faithfully reliant on congregational unity, and as result Flags of the Sacred Harp stands as Jackie-O Motherfucker's most potent and focused liturgy to date.

      -Matthew Murphy, December 12, 2005


      Review by Francois Couture

      Flags of the Sacred Harp is a comeback album of sorts, released after a hiatus in the band's activity and a lineup reconfiguration that sees the return of Nudge leader Honey Owens and the arrival of guitarist Adam Forkner. The break was beneficial, because this is the group's tightest, most pleasant album to date. What strikes first is the song orientation: at least five of the seven pieces can be rightfully called songs. That said, fans of the group's experimental side need not worry. The 16-minute instrumental "Spirit" aptly illustrates that persona of Jackie-O, while a song like "Nice One" develops into looser sections that surely couldn't be interpreted as a sellout decision. "Nice One" opens the album and pins down the mood that will prevail over the next 70 minutes: drugged folk guitar, druggier vocals, highly creative developments. Its catchy chorus is counterbalanced by the equally gripping abstractions of the second half. Two of the three tracks under the ten-minute barrier, "Rockaway" and "Hey Mr. Sky," provide two highlights, the first one thanks to its country feel, the second one for its psychedelic pop leanings, good vocal delivery, and obvious fun. Chaotic drumming and backward tapes kick off "The Louder Roared the Sea." Then, the piece boils down to a delicate acoustic guitar ballad sung by Owens, before a symphony of vinyl (or tapes) joins in for the mock-pompous finale. The more you listen to Flags of the Sacred Harp, the less improvised it sounds, even in its spacier moments. The Jackie-Os are honing their songwriting skills, and it shows. Recommended.
    Links/Resources | top