Grace and Lies. On the surface, the two
concepts couldn't seem more different. One of them restores, the other
ruins. One of them forgives, the other deceives. But to hear Kim Krans,
frontwoman for Family Band, tell it, the two aren't opposed -
they're intertwined. "Grace and Lies are two characters I envisioned last
summer," she says, by way of explaining the haunting title track on the
group's second record. "I couldn't get them out of my head. I saw them in
a field behind our cabin, singing and slow dancing - like ghosts, sort of.
They're the rulers of beauty and false promises. And we all fall for them from
time to time."
And therein lies the beautiful dichotomy of Family
Band. A collaboration between visual-artist-turned-singer Kim Krans and her
husband, onetime heavy-metal guitarist Jonny Ollsin (Children,
S.T.R.E.E.T.S.), the merging of the couple's sensibilities makes for music
that's simultaneously elegant and visceral. Their songs are as stark as bare
trees in winter, Krans' baleful alto swooping mournfully over Ollsin's
glimmering guitar like a black crow against a grey sky. As its title implies Grace
& Lies is equal parts light and shadow, evoking the mystery and
terror of early Cat Power, the ghostly aura ofWarpaint,
with whom Family Band toured in 2011, and the hushed longing of prime-eraCowboy
Junkies. Though they explored similar territory - both sonically and
lyrically - on their self-released debut, Miller Path, on Grace their
canvas is wider -- the greys lusher, the blacks deeper. Assisted by bass and
lapsteel player Scott Hirsch (Hiss Golden Messenger), with production
and instrumental work by Dan Rossen of Grizzly Bear on
"Again," the couple has made a record that boldly confronts
life's darker questions. It's a document of a band staring down life's larger
riddles - love, death, loss and deceit. But for all its lyrical intensity,
there is a current of beauty and hope beneath its fragile, delicate songs.
Despite its dark subject matter, Grace is
the product of a band coming comfortably into their own. And while Grace
& Lies is not afraid to disappear into shadow, in the end, it's
about understanding and growth. "In the end," Krans says, "This
record is about learning to rewrite your own myth."
As well as playing music, Kim and Jonny run The
Wild Unknown, a celebrated company featuring Kim's artwork, illustrations,
and beyond. The couple spends a great amount of time at their handbuilt Miller
Path cabin, just outside of Delhi, New York. Following last summer's forest
party (which you can read about via The FADER), the
band is making plans for this summer's celebration.
Family Band's sophomore album, Grace & Lies,
is out July 24 on No Quarter. This morning, The
FADER premiered an mp3 of the album's opening track,
"Night Song." Download and listen to it below.
Grace & Lies tracklisting:
01. Night Song
02. Lace
03. Moonbeams
04. Ride
05. Your Name
06. Again
07. Grace & Lies
08. Keeper
09. Rest
Family Band online:
http://familybandfamily.com/
http://www.thewildunknown.com/
http://www.facebook.com/pages/FAMILY-BAND/191030395790?ref=ts
http://noquarter.net/
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