Tired Pony: The Ghost of the Mountain
Tired Pony
The Ghost of the Mountain
(Heaneyville)
In this follow-up to 2010âs criminally-underrated The Place We Ran From, Tired Pony picks up telling the story of a couple attempting to escape a dark past. Donât call it a concept album though: this record is perfectly imperfect with blood and California sun.
With the wealth of talent in the bandâGary Lightbody (Snow Patrol), Peter Buck (R.E.M.), Scott McCaughey (The Young Fresh Fellows), Richard Colburn (Belle and Sebastian), Troy Stewart (The Windsor Player), Iain Archer, and Jacknife Leeâthereâs no need for embellishment. Acoustic guitar is the melodic thread to hold the record together, but more unconventional instruments like moog, glockenspiel, drum machine, and thumb piano add flourishes that only become more interesting on repeated listens. This Americana sound isnât afraid to lean electro.
Lyrically, much of the material revolves around fractured love. As the album title suggests, ghosts are a major theme of the album. In âWreckage and Bone,â the narratorâs desperation is revealed, as is his unreliability with lines like, âAnd itâs all in my head/Youâre gone/Youâve been gone forever.â Likewise, âCrave Our Namesâ begins with, âAm I talking to myself? Because it wouldnât be the first time.â Delicate backing vocals from Minnie Driver seem almost like a hallucination of the lover who has been lost and found again. Driver, as well as Bronagh Gallagher and Kim Topper, give voice to a character beyond the reach of the lyrics.
Key tracks are âRavens and Wolves,â with stomping intensity and imagery reminiscent of Game of Thrones, âYour Way is the Way Home,â and the haunting title track. âThe Ghost of the Mountainâ not only has beautifully tragic lyrics as the main character dies, but the arrangement is stunning for an album recorded in under two weeks. This is 2013âs best offering so far.