About This Event
Hi its John Darnielle and this is the new Mountain Goats bio. Every time you make a record you have to have a new bio and its a whole thing. Sometimes you have to have conversations about whod be a good person to write the bio and other times one of the press people does it and you vet it and it goes through a whole process, but we are eliminating the middle man this time. My other job involves writing prose and Im regarded as decent enough at it so lets fast forward through the prelims here. Days is the something-somethingth album by the Mountain Goats. If that last phrase has a number in it then you will know it has been edited by bad people and you should stop reading now. If it says something somethingth then we are still together. Like at least two other tMG albums, specifically Goths and Beat the Champ, Days gets born one day when I have a funny idea. The idea in this case was writing a followup to Goths about the 90s and calling it Grunges. I made this joke on the popular recipes blog Bluesky and accompanied it with a brief ad-lib called Contemplating Pearl Jam in the Carolina Dawn that I recorded in my back yard. But the thing about jokes is theres often something deeper underneath them, most theories of comedy attest to this, dont get me started. Id written out a fake track listing for Grunges but then I wrote a poem about Layne Staley in the underworld getting rescued by Orpheus and I started thinking about the past, a popular theme among writers for many years now, and then I got both sad and smitten with wonder by how the past is a place upon which you both can t enact a sort of renovation: can, by changing perspectives; cant, because you cant actually move any parts around or change anything. You think about this stuff as you get older, if youre lucky enough to be getting older. We recorded the album at Sear Sound in Manhattan, still managed by the legendary Roberta Findlay, with whom I was fortunate enough to have a talk on the phone during the session; Rob Jost played bass on it; he plays in the pit on Death Becomes Her; he also plays French horn here. The group backing vocals are by Catherine Russsell, Jamie Leonhart, and Carolyn Leonhart; the layered backing vocals on Hidden Majesty of Later Venom Albums are by Janis Siegal of the Manhattan Transfer, who was tracking on another floor in the same building while we were at Sear. Giant honor for me to have Janis, I am a huge Manhattan Transfer fan. I called my old friend Matt Nathanson to add vocals to Candlebox. He knocked it straight out of the park. Mikaela Davis added harp to Going to Fennario. You can read about all this in the credits. Looking back on what Ive written I see that bio isnt exactly what youd call this, as it tells you very little about me, or about Jon Wurster, the best drummer in rock and if you think Im exaggerating then bless your heart, or about Matt Douglas, who plays guitars and horns m the singer. Other biographical details are honestly insignificant to my way of thinking, who really cares, but I get that my opinions about this stuff are a little out of step with the zeitgeist. This is Days by the Mountain Goats.