MIDWEST
MUSIC DIRECTORY
Omaha, Nebraska
August 11, 2001
The
Mother Hips
Green Hills of Earth
(Future Farmer)
After
nearly a decade of making music, the Mother Hips have produced
another polished gem. Green Hills of Earth, their fifth album,
has garnered international acclaim and is seen by many as their
best work to date.
Long
considered one of the foremost live bands in California, with
Green Hills the Mother Hips have proven themselves accomplished
studio musicians. Their use of innovative sound, cognac harmonies,
and thinking lyrics has evoked comparisons to everyone from Neil
Young to the Bee Gees to the Beatles. It has been dubbed 'California
Soul', and fans and critics agree that this is the most well-crafted
Mother Hips album yet produced. "Almost every song on the record
sticks in my head. I've listened to it every day since I got it,
and that hardly ever happens," confessed James Sullivan, San Francisco
Chronicle music critic. "Even when I love a record, I only get
to listen to it six or eight times before I feel like I need to
move on to the newer stuff. But with this one, I've made time
to listen."
The
new album has generated a great deal of attention from fans and
critics far and wide. "A slice of fantastically written classical
pop music that makes for a good change of pace from pretty much
everything I've been listening to lately. Classy, nothing less."
(The Collective, U.K., 3/01) "Singing Seems to Ease"
Me has received extensive airtime in major California markets
and album sales have been surprisingly high. July 27th they returned
to a sold out Fillmore in San Francisco, six years after they
did it the first time.
It
marks a turning point for the band. Not since their first album,
Back to the Grotto, has there been such a positive response to
their studio work.
Beset
with personal and professional travails, they released three albums
in the late 90's. Though critically acclaimed, the albums sold
poorly, and the Mother Hips found themselves without a label.
Now
signed with independent Future Farmer Recordings, the Mother Hips
have produced their first great studio work. A crafted narrative
rather than a hodgepodge of songs, Green Hills possesses a sense
of continuity and cohesion. "Smoke", "Such
a Thing"
and "Pull
Us All Together"
hook the listener with stellar harmonies and guitar play, while
songs like "Sarah
Bellum"
and "Emotional
Gold"
serve as hauntingly effective transitions between them. No wasted
energy, no superfluous elements. Song by song, the album is quality.
As a whole, it is a statement. Here we are. The Mother Hips, from
Chico, Ca., built an impressive following with powerful live shows
up and down the western United States in the 1990's. As their
mailing list grew and bootlegs were exchanged, people took notice.
Behind the local success of their independently-produced debut
album (Grotto), they caught the attention of record companies.
Joining Johnny Cash and the Black Crowes, the band signed a deal
with American Recordings. Part Timer Goes Full was released soon
thereafter.
Album
sales were low, but the band was hot. Their live performances
sold out venues like the Fillmore and the House of Blues, and
they embarked on a national tour in support of the album. Playing
with the likes of the Wilco, Blues Traveler, and Widespread Panic
offered them the exposure they had been looking for. Limited support
from American, however, stalled their momentum.
Over
the next few years, the band parted with American Recordings,
two more albums were released, one band member left, one was added,
people were married, had children and life moved along.
The
metamorphosis from a young, 'jam band' (a term they loathe) into
a professional, durable rock and roll band has brought with it
a great deal of perspective. "You just learn a lot about human
nature, your own shadowy side," divulged singer Tim Bluhm in a
recent interview."
The
outlaws of our time are not like Jesse Romance dies by sulfur
lights, just ask Lefty, This is not at all a wake up call, The
gold is in the ground but we're not digging" from "Emotional
Gold."
With
Green Hills of Earth, the Mother Hips return to the short list
of one of the nations premier touring bands. -Shane
Conklin