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Hallowed Ground

 
Album Review: Hallowed Ground

  • Artist: Violent Femmes
  • Rating: StarStarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: 1984
  • Total Time: 38:32
  • Genre: Rock

Review

After the surprise success of their landmark debut, Violent Femmes could have just released another collection of teen-rage punk songs disguised as folk, and coasted into the modern rock spotlight alongside contemporaries like the Modern Lovers and Talking Heads. Instead they made Hallowed Ground, a hellfire-and-brimstone-beaten exorcism that both enraged and enthralled critics and fans alike. Like Roger Waters purging himself of the memories of his father's death through The Wall and The Final Cut, bandleader Gordon Gano uses the record to expel his love/hate relationship with religion, and the results are alternately breathtaking and terrifying. Contrary to initial public response, Hallowed Ground is not a parody. Gano, the son of a Baptist minister, may wear his faith like a badge of honor, but it's a badge, not a shield, and what keeps the songs so volatile is the fact that they're filtered through the eyes, ears, heart, and loins of a teenager. Like the first record, all of the songs on Hallowed Ground were written during Gano's high-school years -- he was barely in his twenties when it was released -- resulting in a perfect rendering of the sweetness and brutality of the postpubescent teen, especially on the album's centerpiece; a searing indictment of loyalties broken and the snitches that break them, "Never Tell" is the perfect balm for the bloody righteousness of youth, and when Gano screams, "I'll stand right up in the heart of Hell/I never tell," it's hard not to stand right beside him. Christian imagery aside, Hallowed Ground is not as polarizing as some make it out to be. The band explores gothic Appalachian folk and child murder on the banjo-fueled "Country Death Song," bawdy and bluesy Lou Reed-inflected infatuation on "Sweet Misery Blues," and nuclear holocaust on the brooding title track, leaving little doubt that this is the same band that penned underground classics like "Gone Daddy Gone" and "Add It Up." Even the decidedly politically uncorrect "Black Girls," with its free jazz mid-section that includes everything from jaw harp to the screaming alto sax of John Zorn and the Horns of Dilemma, is full of the same smirk and swagger that made "Blister in the Sun" the soundtrack to so many people's halcyon days. The Femmes are nothing if not true to themselves, and Hallowed Ground is a testament to their tenacity, courage, and sheer obliviousness to industry ogling. Each track is as naked as it is bursting with ideas, and as the landscape changes, the band changes with it, leaving the listener at a crossroads; with each incantation, growling invective, and honey-whispered promise, they're forced to either jump off the gospel train or ride it along with them into the mouth of Hell. ~ James Christopher Monger, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Country Death Song (Lyrics) Gordon Gano Violent Femmes (5:02)
I Hear the Rain (Lyrics) Gordon Gano Violent Femmes (1:32)
Never Tell (Lyrics) Gordon Gano Violent Femmes (7:10)
Jesus Walking on the Water (Lyrics) Gordon Gano Violent Femmes (3:07)
I Know It's True But I'm Sorry to Say Gordon Gano Violent Femmes (5:05)
Hallowed Ground (Lyrics) Gordon Gano Violent Femmes (4:18)
Sweet Misery Blues Gordon Gano Violent Femmes (2:51)
Black Girls (Lyrics) Gordon Gano Violent Femmes (5:41)
It's Gonna Rain Gordon Gano Violent Femmes (4:11)

Credits

John C. Nate (Photography), Gordon Gano (Vocals), Gordon Gano (Guitar (Electric)), John Tanner (Engineer), Horns of Dilemma (Horn), Christina Houghton (Autoharp), Drake Scott (Cornetto), Victor de Lorenzo (Tranceaphone), Victor de Lorenzo (Percussion), Mark VanHecke (Producer), Victor de Lorenzo (Drums (Electric)), Mark Trilling (Cover Photo), Peter Balestrieri (Vocals), Brian Ritchie (Slide Bass), John Tanner (Clarinet), John Zorn (Sax (Alto)), Brian Ritchie (Vocals), Jeff Price (Art Direction), Victor de Lorenzo (Stomping), Brian Ritchie (Bass), Warren A. Bruleigh (Engineer), Mark VanHecke (Piano), John Zorn (Sound Effects), Brian Ritchie (Jew's-Harp), Gordon Gano (Composer), Victor de Lorenzo (Trap Kit), Tony Trischka (Banjo), Gordon Gano (Fiddle), Victor de Lorenzo (?), Mark Trilling (Photography), Cynthia Gano Lewis (Vocals), Brian Ritchie (Celeste), Drake Scott (Calto), Drake Scott (Sackbut), Mark VanHecke (Organ), Victor de Lorenzo (Drums), Victor de Lorenzo (Vocals), Brian Ritchie (Marimba), Peter Balestrieri (Harmonica), Peter Balestrieri (Sax (Tenor)), Brian Ritchie (Bass (Electric)), Gordon Gano (Guitar (Acoustic))
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Wikipedia: Hallowed Ground (Violent Femmes album)
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Hallowed Ground
Studio album by Violent Femmes
Released June 1984
Recorded Secret Sound Studio, NYC, January, 1984
Genre Alternative rock
Folk punk
Length 38:57
Label Slash Records/Rhino
Producer Mark Van Hecke
Professional reviews
Violent Femmes chronology
Violent Femmes
(1983)
Hallowed Ground
(1984)
The Blind Leading the Naked
(1986)

Hallowed Ground is the second album by the Violent Femmes. It was released in June 1984. Like the first album, these songs were mostly written when singer/guitarist/lyricist Gordon Gano was in high school. "Country Death Song," for example, was based a true story from an 1862 news article about a man who intentionally threw his daughter into a well and then hanged himself in his barn. It was written by Gano during his 10th grade study hall. The Christian-related lyrics on Hallowed Ground were thought by many[who?] to be sarcastic, but Gano is a devout Christian. The other two Femmes were atheists,[citation needed] and initially refused to perform those songs, but after their debut had been recorded, they relented and several of Gano's religion-themed songs were recorded for Hallowed Ground.[citation needed]

Track listing

All songs written and composed by Gordon Gano. 

# Title Length
1. "Country Death Song"   5:02
2. "I Hear the Rain"   1:32
3. "Never Tell"   7:10
4. "Jesus Walking on the Water"   3:07
5. "I Know It’s True but I’m Sorry to Say"   5:05
6. "Hallowed Ground"   4:18
7. "Sweet Misery Blues"   2:51
8. "Black Girls"   5:41
9. "It’s Gonna Rain"   4:11

Personnel

  • Producer - Mark Van Hecke
  • Engineers - John Tanner, Warren Bruleigh
Violent Femmes
Gordon Gano | Brian Ritchie | Victor DeLorenzo | Guy Hoffman
Discography
Studio albums: Violent Femmes | Hallowed Ground | The Blind Leading the Naked | 3 | Why Do Birds Sing? | New Times | Rock!!!!! | Freak Magnet
Compilations: Debacle: The First Decade | Add It Up (1981-1993) | Something's Wrong | Permanent Record: The Very Best of Violent Femmes
Live Albums: Viva Wisconsin | BBC Live | Archive Series No. 1: Live in Iceland | Archive Series No. 2: Live in Chicago Q101
DVDs: Permanent Record - Live & Otherwise | No, Let's Start Over | Live at the Hacienda

 
 

 

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Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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