Jump to Content

Town and Country - Shorter Artist Feature from Issue #38 March-April 2002

Jesse Sykes & The Sweet Hereafter

Dark, mossy energy

SEATTLE, WA

Shortly after singer-songwriter Jesse Sykes met guitarist Phil Wandscher, they took an off-road trip near Stevens Pass, Washington, getting lost on a rugged logging road in a downpour as darkness fell. “I was scared, but I was so in the midst of falling in love that I didn’t care,” Sykes explains. “When I got back to town I wrote the song ‘Reckless Burning’ about the way in which you fall in love and you feel willing to be vulnerable.”

That trust is the cornerstone of Sykes and Wandscher’s musical and personal partnership. “I had just come out of a divorce and the breakup of my band Hominy, and Phil had come out of Whiskeytown,” Sykes says, referring to Wandscher’s 1997 departure from the North Carolina alt-country band and his subsequent relocation to Seattle. “I think when we met, we both just needed to have fun, and we did that.”

While Wandscher was reticent at first about working with someone he was romantically involved with, the pair soon found solace and inspiration in creative collaboration. The organic ease with which they played together and the gestation of the songs proved a perfect antidote to their previous musical experiences.

Soon Sykes and Wandscher added Anne Marie Ruljancich of the Walkabouts on violin. The threesome found an elegant and expressionistic palette for Sykes’ evocative lyrics. Their spare, muscular songs plumbed the depths of dissolution and rebirth, the struggles between sadness and hope. “I called a bunch of musicians I was in awe of and asked them if they would make this record with us, and they did,” Sykes says of the Sweet Hereafter’s formation. “Luckily they decided to keep going.”

With bassist Bill Herzog (Citizen’s Utilities, Neko Case) and drummer Kevin Warner, the band recorded Reckless Burning with producer Tucker Martine. The album captures Sykes & the Sweet Hereafter in all their nuances and textures. Sykes and Wandscher alight their songs’ hard experience with a sweet surrender that nods to the troubled undercurrents of life while heading for higher ground. Wandscher’s moody guitar creates a subtly shifting atmosphere of countrified folk-noir; Sykes’ exquisite voice is front-and-center, suggesting a cross between Emmylou Harris and a haunted Bobbie Gentry.

Many of the songs were written on nature excursions. While Wandscher fished, Sykes would sit by the campfire and work on songs. “It’s rooted in the dark, mossy energy of the Northwest,” says Sykes. That natural darkness suffuses Reckless Burning with a slow, consuming heat that takes the listener to a private emotional geography. “Our record isn’t something that confronts you,” Wandscher says. “It takes you by the hand and leads you somewhere.”

Enjoy the ND archives? Consider making a donation. Advertising helps defray our basic expenses, but doesn’t touch the over $150,000 invested to get this content online. Just $10 (or more!) from 15,000 of our fans and we will reach our goal. Thanks for your support.

Or send a check to: No Depression, PO Box 31332, Seattle, WA 98103

Discuss

Did you enjoy this article? Start a discussion about it, or find out what others are saying in the No Depression Community forum.

Join the Discussion »

Find out what's going on in roots music. Share concert photos and videos, learn about new artists, blog about the music you love.

Join the No Depression Community »

Originally Featured in Issue #38 March-April 2002

Buy our history before it’s gone!

Each issue is artfully designed and packed full of great photos that you don‘t get online. Visit the No Depression store to own a piece of history.

Visit the No Depression Store »


From the Blogs

  • The Real Cupid Revealed Thanks to Eilen Jewell
    Valentine's Day is upon us. Its time we revisit Eilen Jewell's Bang Bang Bang from 2011's Queen of the Minor Key. Cupid firing at random...using a sawed-off shot gun...random and even cruel. These sentiments line up more with most people's love experiences than the traditional depiction of Cupid and love. This is a live clip of Bang Bang […]
  • Americana Boogie: New music this week from Punch Brothers, Kevin Gordon, Otis Taylor, Albert Lee & more...
    Original post on Americana Boogie.  Here's some of the new Americana and roots-type music for the week of February 14th, 2012, otherwise known as Valentine's Day. The artist's names link to their websites and the CD title links go to either Amazon or… […]
  • Too Much, The Magic Boat
    After forty years or so, the concert experience gets a little old even though some of the people who have playing through the ages still can put on a pretty good show. Even so, too many of us have lost interest in the endless hassles of scoring good seats, waiting on long lines and fighting the crowds. In the past we'd be herded through the turnstiles […]
  • Interview: A Discussion with Charlie Parr
    I discovered the music of Charlie Parr by starting with a pair of his albums that were recorded with two of my favorite artists: Glory In The Meeting House (featuring Black Twig Pickers) and Backslider (featuring Trampled By Turtles). After absorbing these two, I moved onto Roustabout, Jubilee (featuring Dave Simonett of TBT), and When The Devil Goes Blind. […]
  • Nathan and the Zydeco Cha Chas Papa Mojo's Roadhouse Durham NC 2/11/12
    Nathan and the Zydeco  Cha-ChasPapa Mojo's RoadhouseDurham N CFeb 11, 2012  By Grant Britt Nathan Williams doesn't just stand on a stage- he owns it. And even if the venue has no stage, Williams presence fills up the room. At Mel Melton's Papa Mojo's s Roadhouse in Durham Saturday night, Williams and his band, the Zydeco Cha-chas, had  t […]
  • day after day after day
    I made it through the first seventeen minutes of the Grammy Awards before I went upstairs to where the kids hang out and watched a couple episodes of The Wire, Season Five on DVD. My wife was doing work in front of the downstairs television so she kept the show on, and I caught or heard a few snippets like the Beach Boy's reunion, Glen Campbell's […]

Shop Amazon by clicking through this logo to support NoDepression.com. We get a percentage of every purchase you make!


Subscribe To the No Depression Newsletter

Subscribe to the No Depression Newsletter