Artist: Trailer Bride
Waxed - Record Review from Issue #47 Sept-Oct 2003
Trailer Bride – Hope Is A Thing With Feathers
Melissa Swingle’s best songs play out like Faulknerian tales of ruin set to music. Hope Is a Thing With Feathers finds the Trailer Bride singer at her finest on the sepia-toned leadoff track “Silk Hope Road”. In a world-weary voice that suggests too many nights alone in an unlit farmhouse, Swingle presents us with a [...]
Miked - Live Reviews from Issue #42 Nov-Dec 2002
Neko Case – Just For Laughs (Montreal, Quebec)
Neko Case didn’t find it too funny. Her Montreal gig was in the showbar of the city’s Just For Laughs humor museum, but then, in classic touring band fashion, her van gave out. It was near midnight before Case and her two band mates finally took the stage, almost 90 minutes late. Not that the [...]
Waxed - Record Review from Issue #34 July-Aug 2001
Trailer Bride – High Seas
As a child, I was simultaneously exhilarated and terrified by carousels, clowns, organ grinder monkeys, and the ocean. I never outgrew those weird attractions/phobias. I still become joyful and anxious at the sight of a spider monkey wearing a bellhop’s hat. I had a similar emotional response the first time I listened to Trailer Bride’s [...]
The Long Way Around - Feature from Issue #25 Jan-Feb 2000
Trailer Bride – Snake Charmers
So there I am, slumping in my favorite chair on the back porch of my Tucson digs, when into my peripheral window slithers a large black-and-yellow-banded bull snake. Suddenly I am on full alert, for despite the fact that bull snakes out here are considered good neighbors — they trim back the rat population, and [...]
Waxed - Record Review from Issue #24 Nov-Dec 1999
Trailer Bride – Whine De Lune
Wanna work on the railroad, wanna drive some steel/Hey mister, won’t you hire me?/It’s been a while since my last meal/He says: But you’re a woman, run along back home/Who’s keeping your babies?/Does your husband know you’re out alone? At the outset of Trailer Bride’s second Bloodshot release, singer-guitarist Melissa Swingle imparts those lines with [...]
Waxed - Record Review from Issue #15 May-June 1998
Trailer Bride – Smelling Salts
As niches go, “female rockabilly hepcat” looks to be wide open. Not anymore. Say hidy to Melissa Swingle, the singer-guitarist who puts the Bride (not to mention the smarts) in this North Carolina trio. Imagine a female Randy Newman crooning sly, jacked-up songs about double-wide trailers, right-wing militias and reckless driving as self-expression in a [...]
Town and Country - Shorter Artist Feature from Issue #7 Jan-Feb 1997
Trailer Bride – One flew over the rooster’s nest
There’s this band called Trailer Bride. They’re impossible to describe, but whatever you wanna call it, they sound really good. They’ve got a new CD that shows off some spiffy guitar and harmonica playing, and some ear-catching vocals, and some deceptively simple, almost loopy lyrics that hide pretty powerful insights. We’ll get to all that. [...]
