8hands featured TV moment: Jeffrey Lewis on the Culture Show
Jeffrey Lewis is one of my favorite artists – I wrote about him too many times by now, so there is no point in me explaining again why he's such a superior singer / songwriter. All there is to know is that he is amazing, and now, after watching him on BBC's "The Culture Show", I understand that I'm not alone.
If you are not convinced, listen to the man Jarvis Cocker, who, as I learned from "The Culture Show", thinks Lewis is the best lyricist working in the USA today.
Check out the video and let me know if you agree.
8hands Featured Artist: Jeffrey Lewis, Again.
I already wrote here before about Jeffrey Lewis, but he had just released a new album and I had to repeat myself. What can I say? I'm a sucker for this witty anti-folker.
"12 Crass Songs", Lewis' new release is a covers album. No, wait. It's a tribute album. Oh, no. it's a charity album. Hmmm… No! It's a love and hate album, I think. It shows Lewis' love to the legendary Crass and represents Lewis' hate of authority, capitalism, violence and basically, in the words of Crass themselves, the system.
Back in those late 70s / beginning of 80s British punk days, Crass were one of the most controversial anarchist bands. They wrote war songs that fought against anything that was normal and everything wrong that came their way. Their Battle maybe seems a bit too oblivious these days, maybe even banal – it's not that I don't agree with their views, it's just that today a good protest comes in a more intellectual way – Still, sometimes the good old clichés are the truest thing around. Jeffrey Lewis looked for these primal anger feelings and found them in Crass.

Jeffrey Lewis Vs. The System
It's not that Lewis couldn't write songs like these on his own, but if he did, it wouldn't feel right. Lewis is too sharp and self aware, and hearing him sing lines about buying stuff that we don't need can be weird. I mean yeah, the system sucks, we all know that.
But Lewis wanted to scream out these thoughts without actually writing songs that don't fit his day-to-day catalog and he decided to record twelve old Crass songs. That way it will be a lovely tribute & a decent protest all at once.

Lewis took the songs into his domain and completely "folked" them out. He even added some lines to make the lyrics more relevant (the war in Iraq & Sarah Jessica Parker are here, of course). The production of the album is a bit more advanced than Lewis' old work, but even though I'm a fan of the low-fi, that isn't necessary a bad thing. "12 Crass Songs" is a beautiful album that actually says something, in the old-fashioned way – Songs like "Punk is Dead" and "I Ain't Thick" are nothing less than brilliant.
If you are worried about Lewis making money over the skeletons of what was once a great idealistic band, don't. Lewis will donate all the money that was earned by this project to several charities. Considering the fact that Lewis never really had his 15 minutes of fame, you've got to agree he is anything but greedy, and that, more than everything else, shows that he is the true current holder of Crass' torch.

8hands Artists Of The Week: Jeffrey & Jack Lewis
Personally, I hate Bonnie Prince Billy AKA Will Oldham AKA whatever. I also think he is way too overrated - the Bruce Springsteen of the folk revival. He's got the most un-special voice ever & his lyrics are ridiculously predictable.

But not all of us at the 8hands mega-team feel the same way, and I can't even remember how many times we argued about that. Our Goldi loves Oldham. She says he's got "a moving fragile voice" and when she listens to him she sees "paintings & landscapes". Oh, Oldham also keeps her belly “feels cosey in the winter".
A while ago, I found out that Jeffrey Lewis, a great anti-folk artist, got a love-hate relationship with Oldham - kinda like us (only with us it's clear - Goldi is the "love" part and I'm the "hate" part. Lewis loves him & hates him at the same time). On Lewis & his brother's Jack album, "City & Eastern Songs", he's got a brilliant song called “Williamsburg Will Oldham Horror”, where he sort-of tells the truth about Billy. Or not.

Anyway, we decided that 8hands video of the week will be the video clip for “Williamsburg Will Oldham Horror”, so all of the 8hands users will be able to see Will Oldham as he really is – an artist worth admiring, or, “just a rich kid or a fascist or a charlatan”.













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