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"When
Some Girls started, we had no long-range plans," says
Juliana Hatfield. "But the first album and tour went so
well that we were excited about doing it again. This
time it felt more like a band and less like a scary
experiment."
Crushing Love
is the second album by Some Girls, the iconoclastic trio
consisting of singer, guitarist and esteemed solo artist
Hatfield plus drummer Freda Love, previously Hatfield's
bandmate in seminal indie combo the Blake Babies and now
a member of the Mysteries of Life, and
bassist/multi-instrumentalist Heidi Gluck,
formerly of the Pieces and currently of the Only
Children. The 14-track collection expands the
provocative, hook-laden songcraft of its 2003
predecessor Feel It into compelling new
directions, while maintaining the same balance of
electric energy, melodic craft and emotional nuance that
made the prior disc so resonant.
With
Hatfield, Love and Gluck sharing vocal and songwriting
duties, the songs boast subtly irresistible hooks and
pointedly punchy performances, as well as deceptively
plainspoken lyrics that navigate thorny personal
territory with unflinching truthfulness and barbed
humor.
Those
qualities are prominent on such Hatfield-written numbers
as "Poor Man's You," "Social Control" and "Stars in My
Dreams." Love's equally noteworthy compositions,
including "Partner In Crime," "Is This What I've Been
Waiting For?" and "Never Really Mine," are disarmingly
forthright, with the drummer stepping up to the mic to
deliver a rare lead vocal on the latter tune. Gluck also
weighs in with a pair of melodically lilting, lyrically
bittersweet gems, "On My Own Again" and "Live Alone."
"This
record was a lot more collaborative than the first one,
and it definitely felt more like a cohesive band this
time," says Love. "Juliana and I have so much history
together that the way we work together is almost
second-nature, and the added element of a new person
makes it feel fresh. Heidi's involvement on this record
was really significant, and her skills as a
multi-instrumentalist added a lot."
"Some
Girls is a really open, creative atmosphere, and it
feels totally different from what I do in my solo
thing," Hatfield asserts. "In my head, Some Girls is an
outlet for certain songs that I feel like I can't do
justice to without Freda. Her drumming is so
effervescent and groovy that some songs seem to call out
for it. And Heidi is such a great musician and singer
that she kind of makes it all jell."
The
trio recorded Crushing Love under relatively
rushed, chaotic circumstances, a situation that brought
out the best in the threesome's creative chemistry. "It
ended up being liberating for us, because we didn't have
time to fuss over it," Love observes. "Once it started
rolling, things really started pouring out of us, and
those circumstances seemed to foster creativity and
risk-taking. We didn't rehearse or make demos; we just
showed up and started making the record. We sort of made
it up as we went along, which turned out to be a great
way to make a record."
Another
element that forced Some Girls to revise its working
methods was Love's recent battle with arthritis, which
caused her to revise her percussive approach and
reinvent herself as a stand-up drummer. "The necessity
of having to break the drum kit down and play parts
separately made us realize that we weren't limited to
what I could physically play," Love explains. "That set
us free to experiment with different beats, or to try
something on the drum machine or add some percussion."
Crushing Love's
on-the-fly recording approach was well suited to the
emotional immediacy of the band's new material. "The
songwriting was more of a collaboration this time,"
Hatfield notes. "When we started working on this album,
I'd just finished one of my own and I was feeling like
maybe I didn't have that much more to say. But Freda
stepped up with songs that said a lot of things that I
was feeling but wasn't able to write at that time. I'm
really in awe of Freda's writing. She says these things
in her lyrics that sound so simple that they can almost
go right past you, but they're so profound."
"A lot
of the songs on this record are asking questions, rather
than trying to give answers," Love states. "A lot of
them are about being willing to live with uncertainty."
"That's
how emotions and relationships are, because things don't
get resolved all the time," says Gluck. "To me, a great
song isn't about conflict and resolution. Sometimes it's
just about capturing a fleeting little feeling, rather
than trying to explain the world in four minutes. I
think that Juliana and Freda are really good at that. I
like the fact that this album isn't just one concept or
idea. It's three people trying to put things together
and make sense of things."
"For
me," Hatfield offers, "art is about working through
things as a way to survive the pain and passions of
life. You write and sing about this stuff as a way to
not go crazy. It's not about summing things up or coming
up with answers or making people feel good. It's about
telling the truth, or expressing your own truth, and the
truth isn't always pretty or happy."
In
addition to the band members' own compositions,
Crushing Love also features three tracks penned by
outside writers. Hatfield: "'Just Like That” is a song
that my ex-boyfriend wrote about me while we were
together. I guess it's a little weird, me singing a song
that was written by someone else about me, but it's a
cool song and I felt an affinity for it."
The
heartbreaking "He's On Drugs Again" was written by
LonPaul Ellrich of the Indiana indie combo Sardina. Some Girls began playing the song while
touring to support Feel It, and were so
enthusiastic about it that they recorded it during a day
off at Polara leader Ed Ackerson's Minneapolis
studio; it's that version that appears on Crushing
Love.
The
album's third cover is the haunting album closer
"Magnetic Fields," written by Love's husband (and
Mysteries of Life bandmate) Jake Smith. The song also
provides Crushing Love's title. "They're the last
two words on the album, and the phrase lingers in your
mind," says Hatfield, adding, "It also makes us sound
like superheroes. Jake's songs are always kind of
inscrutable, but it seems to be saying that there are
things we can't control that destroy the love between us
or create wonderful things between us. It's horrible and
wonderful at the same time, and that kind of sums up
everything for me."
Combining aggressively infectious tunes with hard-won
insight, Crushing Love once again demonstrates
why Some Girls is more than the sum of its parts and not
your average supergroup.
"This
is a great way to be in a band," Hatfield concludes,
"because there's no pressure and no agenda other than
the music. I love working with Freda and Heidi; we do it
for the sheer enjoyment of making music together and
seeing what we can come up with. And we all live in
different cities, so we don't spend enough time together
to annoy each other." |