A welcome return to the musical borderlands
Drummer John Convertino inspires a bit of déjà vu with the rim clicks that open Carried to Dust’s lead track “Victor Jara’s Hands.” They recall the beginning of “Quattro (World Drifts In),” the second track on Calexico’s 2003 masterwork Feast of Wire.
Garden Ruin, the album between Feast of Wire and Carried to Dust,
seemed to shrink the space Calexico occupied. It was intimate; an
indoors album. It also downplayed the distinctive Southwestern spice
that swirls through the band’s best work.
Bandleaders Joey Burns
and Convertino never rely solely on brassy horn stabs, percussive
acoustic guitar and the lilt of the Spanish language, but Calexico’s
finest moments are panoramic evocations of the American West draped in
Latin sabor and swing. This flavor makes a welcome return on Carried to Dust.
It’s there in “Victor Jara’s Hands” (the title referring to a slain
Chilean theater director, musician and political activist) and in the
horn-driven “Inspiración,” written and sung by trumpeter Jacob
Valenzuela.
Carried to Dust is all wide-open spaces. The
album is designed as a kind of travelogue about a Los Angeles scribe on
a road trip during the recent Writers Guild strike. It’s a conceit most
apparent in “Writer’s Minor Holiday,” but journeying infuses most of
the album, from “Bend to the Road” to haunting closer “Contention
City,” named for a ghost town in southeastern Arizona.
It’s tempting to think of Carried to Dust as a companion piece to Feast of Wire.
It has the same stylistic diversity, with a hefty dose of pan-Latin
zest. And, like that distinguished predecessor, this one is a beauty
from start to finish.