Band of Horses Debut “Lights”

Band Of Horses have shared new single "Lights," the track is off their forthcoming release 'Things Are Great,' available March 4, 2022
Band Of Horses' Ben Bridwell photo by Stevie and Sarah Gee

Band of Horses have shared “Lights,” off their forthcoming album. Things Are Great, the full-length drops on 4th via BMG. Lead singer Ben Bridwell’s lyrics envision a cinematic reflecting on a night out with a friend that mutates into what feels like a Law & Order episode, but the case is actually a mystery of where did the love go. Bridwell reflects, “I was with my family at an indoor water park hotel. On my last day there, I was walking down the hall and this guy was like, ‘Ben?’ It happened to be this dude that was producing the film that I was writing the score for. We met up in the family-friendly hotel bar which gets closed down by us at 10:00, at which point we then ended up in the parking lot. We get a little loose – nothing too crazy, but we ended up dodging security guards. Our story then goes on to when I’m back home and someone had broken into my house. With the cops that ended up being around, there were more people turning the lights on us, one way or another. At the parking lot of the hotel, it was the security guards turning them on to check on us out there and at home, it was the lights going on and off with these cops. I’m drawing metaphors here and there from these two stories. Also, things were going poorly for me at that time and that kind of peppers the entire track.”

“More metaphorically,” explains Bridwell, “the song was meant to be a bit uplifting and I’m wishing for a better existence in a way. I’m getting over the things that had been going wrong in my life. The lights go on signifying it’s a better day kind of thing.”

More on Things Are Great…
-Written by Jaan Uhelszki

There might be no other band that was able to channel the generational anxiety of 20-somethings in those early millennial years and turn it into such powerful and inclusive art. Band of Horses fashioned gorgeously ragged epics, Ben Bridwell’s high-flying vocals and eccentric enunciation floating like a specter over sweeping soundscapes that felt like prelude to a dream. The songs always veered between two points: dark and light, strength and vulnerability, apathy and devotion, hope and despair, but hope always nosed a little ahead.

Band founder Bridwell is a keen and enthusiastic storyteller, but also a relentless observer of the quirks and vagaries of the human heart and the peculiar beauty of dysfunction. He possesses the heightened sensitivity of a hyper-aware soul, ever- watchful and wary that there might be a pothole, a pitfall or a monster under the bed, always a little suspicious of happiness and human connection. Full of profundity, truth and sometimes just homespun advice of how to live, Band of Horses songs have become anthems, mantras and touchstones for fans.

“I’m not sure about that,” Bridwell says from his front porch outside of Charleston, South Carolina, his rambunctious dog Lucille gamboling around the yard and causing a racket. “It’s always a bit overwhelming to hear about the role you play in people’s lives, and how the songs resonate with some of their big moments, like when they fall in love, or lose that love, or just lose someone close to them. But really, I think the thing that connects all the Band of Horses albums is I’m always complaining about something,” he laughs self-effacingly.

Complaining doesn’t even begin to describe what Bridwell does. He is as much a way-shower and prophet as he is a musician, uncannily seeming to spot menace, discord and psychic distress before the rest of us. He sounds the alarm in his songs, cloaking peril in swooping guitars and layered, deceptively fragile sounds. His vocals — wistful, plaintive, ethereal — attempt to belie the apprehension in the lyrics, which possess a crucial degree of universality: They’re never so specific or personal that listeners can’t project themselves into the words and make them their own.

Unease bled into the songs, beginning with the anxious chiming guitar on album-opener “Warning Signs” — a song inspired by an incident in 2016, when Bridwell lost his voice onstage at the Sydney Opera House, bringing him to tears in front of the Australian audience. But anyone who listened closely to the group’s 2016 album, Why Are You OK, sensed a hint of discontent and chill in the rarified South Carolina air in the place that the singer liked to call “Happyville.” Why Are You OK seemed to anticipate some of the themes that appear on Things Are Great, especially apparent on OK’s “Casual Party” and album-closer “Even Still,” with its foreboding last lines, “But I could just leave/I could just leave, oh.” “I think that’s where our rebirth began. We hinted at it the last album while we still had the other lineup,” Bridwell begins, stopping to gather his thoughts. “Well, there were things that were just not working, but I wasn’t sure exactly what back then … ” he trails off.

But time and reflection helped him figure it out. Bridwell changed the Band of Horses lineup—
Tyler Ramsey and Bill Reynolds departed in May 2017 –to recapture some of the raw emotion and unpolished punk-rock spirit of the days when they were inventing themselves from the remains of the sad, sprawling orchestral-pop band Carissa’s Wierd. Except for drummer Sera Cahoone, most of the members of that Seattle band were self-taught. “When I started, I was a crappy drummer in a slow-core band that broke up because it wasn’t going nowhere,” Bridwell says. “All of a sudden I had to figure out how to do guitar stuff [for this band]. I put my hands where they’re comfortable, my fingers on the fretboard and detune the strings to make it comfortable for the shapes. I didn’t have to learn all these goddam fucking chords. Now I’m stuck with all these weird tunings that don’t make sense to anyone else. It’s kinda hilarious showing them to accomplished players or guitar techs. It’s hard for them to play much of anything in those tunings,” laughs Bridwell.

“I was fucking around figuring things out as I went along, but looking back I realize the way I played guitar was the main identity of the band.” Drummer Creighton Barrett echoed that sentiment in an interview with Relix. “When we first started touring, we had to have a guitar tech immediately because we had to travel with 12 guitars that had to stay in their tunings. Ben didn’t know how to tune a guitar, so all those songs are written in those weird tunings. So they dictated choruses and verses.” But back then, Bridwell was self-conscious about his lack of ability, and he kept hiring name producers and drafting crack musicians into the lineup. “Early on I thought we needed better players — and don’t forget there’s so many ex-members of this band,” Bridwell admits. “Like it ain’t just Bill and Tyler who I asked to leave. If you look on Wikipedia it’ll show you there’s over 10 that are gone. So it’s a constant evolving lineup.” He hesitates, then in a rush of words says, “I hope people just don’t think that is me being ruthless. I’m still friends with

almost everybody who has ever been in the band.” “It’s no slight on Tyler [Ramsey] and Bill [Reynolds], because they’re good. Almost too good. Creighton and I and even Ryan [Monroe, keyboards] have all been in the band since almost the beginning. [But after the last album] we all felt kind of a bit listless. We were in this professional recording band thing at this expensive studio – like a time-is-money thing — and it just wasn’t working for me.” He knew it for sure when he began to sneak out to record demos of what he was working on with a young engineer and producer named Wolfgang “Wolfie” Zimmerman, not telling anyone in the band about what he was doing.

That was when he did some serious thinking about Band of Horses and what needed changing. Shortly afterward, he asked Ramsey and Reynolds to leave. It was also when Bridwell realized he needed to exert some control on the production, and along with Zimmerman, he produced or co-produced all of the tracks, with help from Grandaddy’s Jason Lytle and Flaming Lips producer Dave Fridmann. “I don’t consider deciding to produce [the record] a rebellion, but a recapturing of our own — and my own — spirit, honestly,” the musician explains.

Band of Horses is now composed of Bridwell, longtime members Monroe and Barrett, Archers of Loaf bassist Matt Gentling (who was in Band of Horses’ touring band in 2007 and appeared on a track on Why Are You OK) and guitarist Ian MacDougall, Broken Golden front man, and until 2017, the Band of Horses merch manager. “I was convinced by Creighton and Bryan, our tour manager. They told me, ‘Ian can play, man, he’s kind of a fucking stud when it comes to guitar. And so I listened to their advice, and I’m glad I did. Because if anything, this album is a return to just us. It’s just fucking us.”

Some of the songs on Things Are Great document that change in members, as well as other connections in Bridwell’s life that shifted, or remained. “This album tells a story of relationships. Personal relationships, my relationship. But I don’t want to single anyone out,” he says quietly. “It even shows the story of musical relationships changing. There are new relationships, like the one I have with Wolfie [Zimmerman], who was my creative conscience at times. There’s also relationships that have endured as well as ones that are ending. That’s important. The ones with Matt or Ryan and Creighton. Or the people who come back in my life, like Dave Sardy, who mixed Infinite Arms, and mixed this album; and Jason Lytle, who produced Why Are You OK and is back again. There’s a lot of lasting relationships that I think tell a part of the story as well. “But what this album really is, is the evolution of where the fuck we’re at at this point in our lives, personally and collectively, and it tells the stories hopefully from all sides, not just his or hers but the truth.”

The truth is never really uncovered, but that makes it more interesting. The songs – like life — pose more questions than answers: blurry snapshots of scenes from a marriage, a band, fleeting connections, long-term friendships and other sorts of attachments that humans make, even with journalists. The album’s last song, “Coalinga,” is about a road trip Band of Horses took with writer Pat McGuire and photographer Brantley Gutierrez through the Central California coast for the cover of Filter magazine in 2007. It details the quirky, colorful mishaps they experienced together in a town whose “claim to fame” is smelling like cow excrement. The story resulted in an enduring friendship with McGuire and Gutierrez, who contributed music and play guitar on the track. A line in the original Filter article provided the album title.

Before that adventure, a powerful suite of songs takes the listener on a journey into and out of pain. At times you feel like you’re following a sleepwalker fumbling through the five stages of grief, finally awakening and arriving, if not at acceptance, then at some sort of brave Deliverance.

An epic album, Things Are Great is not an exercise in nostalgia or regret. It’s closer to the classic pattern of the hero’s journey, one where Bridwell doesn’t locate those elusive answers but does find himself in the end, providing hope that all of us can do the same.

Band Of Horses
Things Are Great
Track list
BMG Records

Warning Signs
Crutch
Tragedy of the Commons
In The Hard Times
In Need of Repair
Aftermath
Lights
Ice Night We’re Having
You Are Nice To Me
Coalinga

Pre-order Things Are Great by Band Of Horses HERE

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