Virgin Records recording artists The Constellations with an EXCLUSIVE acoustic performance on Mevio Underground
Debut Album SOUTHERN GOTHIC available June 22 - Preview Tracks
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The Constellations could have called their debut album After Hours.
Sure, Martin Scorsese already used that name for his 1985 black comedy,
but the two works share much in common. Both are wide screen spectacles
rife with seedy scenes and eccentric personalities, propelled by a
manic energy that hustles the audience deeper into the unexpected. But
Southern Gothic was a better choice. Because The Constellations
stomping ground is Atlanta, GA, and in the wee small hours of the
morning, A-Town can get awfully bizarre.
The record is all about what happens in Atlanta from 2 AM until noon.
Your tour guide on this madcap adventure is the magnetic frontman and
vocalist Elijah Jones, the ringleader of the twisted circus that is The
Constellations, who spent two years writing and recording the album
with producer Ben H. Allen (Animal Collective, Gnarls Barkley), along
with some storied cronies from the local scene. Not that they set out
with specific intentions. Far from it. “All of us wanted to do a record
about Atlanta, but we never said it in words,” recalls Jones. “But the
deeper we got into it, the more we realized we were writing a concept
album.”
Atlanta has been providing the backdrop and soundtrack for Jones life
since childhood. Now he wanted to share his hometown’s underbelly with
the rest of the world. “Atlanta is a huge city, but it still has a
small town feel to it,” explains the singer. “Everybody knows
everybody, you run into the same people at the same bars every week. So
it’s still kind of Mayberry, but with all the yummy stuff that comes
along with being a big city—and all the bad stuff, too.”
“Atlanta is strange,” he adds, “because we’re all basically pushed
together.” The hip-hop heads, punk rockers, and indie kids all rub
shoulders and mix it up. Southern Gothic reflects that inclusive
diversity in its far-reaching sound. “The record was designed to sound
lyrically and melodically very thought out, and sonically very
disorganized,” comments Allen. One expects nothing less from a singer
who cites Tom Waits and Cee-Lo of Goodie Mob and Gnarls Barkley as his
musical heroes, working with a producer who name-checks Fela Kuti and
Gorillaz among their record’s key influences.
Check out the centerpiece, “Step Right Up (A Tribute To Tom Waits).”
The foundation of this delirious nine-minutes-and-change comes from a
cut on Waits’ 1976 classic Small Change. But it mutated along the way,
with customized lyrics about the ATL. In this cavalcade of neon lights
and shady characters, no names have been changed, because no one is
innocent. Jones beckons the listener to keep up as he lurches from the
Clermont Lounge to the Drunken Unicorn and beyond, his carnival bark
underpinned with dizzy disco whorls and eddies, and anchored by a
soulful chorus of irresistible exhortations. The extended percussion
jam that caps the track calls down an ecstatic abandon on par with LCD
Soundsystem. More cowbell? You don’t have to ask twice.
Yet there are many twists and turns ahead of “Step Right Up.” The
eleven-song set kicks off with “Setback,” a psychedelic freak-out of
wiggling synthesizers and vintage organ, shot through with a nasal
drawl reminiscent of Beastie Boys, and a wordless chorus that won’t let
go. For the salacious funk number “Felicia,” Jones drew inspiration
from the laidback ‘70s vignettes of Iggy Pop and Lou Reed. “December”
opens with a baroque snippet a la some lost minuet, but detours into
‘60s folk rock harmonies as it picks up momentum.
The band’s name refers to the myriad musicians from the regional scene
who either contributed to making Southern Gothic, or have since played
in The Constellations live band. One luminary who drops in is Cee-Lo,
whose verse on the electro-rocker “Love Is A Murder” prompted a
completely overhaul the track underneath.
Another guest is suburban rapper Asher Roth, lending his playful rhymes
to “We’re Here To Save The Day,” among the disc’s most insidious
moments. On the one hand, this ditty’s sound is pure sing-along bliss,
with a gleeful chorus delivered by Elijah’s niece and nephew. Yet at
the same time, Jones and Roth drop rhymes that lampoon commercial top
40 hip-hop and chest-thumping poseurs.
Because Southern Gothic was created on the artists’ own time and own
dime, as an experimental studio project, no thought was initially given
to recreating the songs live. No, that only came after it turned out
there was plenty of demand for The Constellations to do exactly that.
“We’d put in fifty billion handclaps and shakers, all kinds of crazy
stuff,” admits Jones. “That’s why we have eight band members.” Although
the line-up would go through numerous changes, today its stable core
finds Jones accompanied by a five-piece combo and the non-stop shimmy,
shout and wail of two female back-up singers.
Well before The Constellations had settled into its current
incarnation, their explosive shows were selling out all over the city.
Wes Hoffman had been putting on parties at Atlanta hot spot Star Bar,
and booked one the earliest Constellations gigs. “The first thing I
noticed was the freshness of the music,” he remembers. Lyrics about
Atlanta made things more appealing. But the key was seeing how fired up
the crowd got. “I knew this band was on to something from how people
responded.” When the group told him they couldn’t play a subsequent gig
because their bassist was unavailable, Hoffman stepped in and learned
the bass parts himself. He’s been part on the team ever since.
You don’t need an in-depth knowledge of the 404 to appreciate Southern
Gothic. One of The Constellations’ biggest markets outside Georgia is
Milwaukee. Their songs may reference specific sites, but the appeal is
universal. Perhaps because we all know characters like these. And
Jones, who grew up singing in the church and whose father was a Baptist
deacon, recognizes how to exploit the tension between dark and light in
everyone’s life. “People ask me, ‘How can you be into this weird after
hours scene, coming from a Christian background?’ But you can’t just
write about the good in life. There’s some bad shit in the human heart,
and that part of it is just a little more interesting to me.”