A scarecrow cowboy at dawn. Lonely footsteps on a creaky wooden floor. Cars speeding down an empty highway as smoke rises from a burning roadhouse. Phantom Threshold is the soundtrack to the movie youâve always had inside of your head.
No one will ever accuse Steve Dawson of standing in one place long enough to let the moss grow under his feet. While other people were sheltering in place and trying to ride out the pandemic, Steve was locked away at his Henhouse Studio in Nashville, cooking up some new music. By the time the air cleared last summer, heâd written, played and recorded enough material for three new albums.
The first record, the recently released and critically acclaimed âGone Long Goneâ explored Dawsonâs love of roots music in the folk and blues tradition. A mixture of songs and instrumentals, it featured old friends like Allison Russell and Fats Kaplin.
âPhantom Thresholdâ is the second album in the series, and is an instrumental release that explores some very deep and elusive musical territory. In many ways, âPhantom Thresholdâ resumes the musical conversations started in âTelescope,â Steveâs pedal steel-based instrumental album from 2008. The core band, dubbed âThe Telescope Three,â in reference to that release, is comprised of Jeremy Holmes (bass), Chris Gestrin (keyboards), and Jay Bellerose (drums/percussion). The natural telepathy between the musicians can be heard throughout âPhantom Thresholdâ as they cook up an enticing blend of textured string and keyboard sounds. Recorded with an array of vintage tube amps, Dawsonâs distinctive pedal steel sound is always in the forefront, vocalizing themes and defining parameters for the plethora of unusual instruments running from pump organ and accordion to the otherworldly marxophone (a kind of fretless zither played with hammers) and Moog synthesizer.
Guest musicians include Daniel Lapp, who added some beautiful violin and cornet accents to âCozy Cornerâ and âTripledream,â and Fats Kaplin who played fiddle and banjo on the title track as well as accordion on âThe Waters Rise.â
Even though âPhantom Thresholdâ was recorded remotely, it expresses a spontaneity and looseness throughout as a well-developed group mind guides Dawsonâs melodic excursions into some very adventurous musical territory. The album has an expansive Paris, Texas era Ry Cooder feel, replete with a pulsing psychedelic undercurrent that makes the whole affair flow together like an imaginary collaboration between John Ford and Federico Fellini. (Stagecoach meets Satyricon anyone?)
All of the tracks are Steve Dawson originals, except âThe Waters Riseâ a co-write with Fats Kaplin, and a woozy lysergic cover of The Beach Boysâ âYou Still Believe In Meâ written by Brian Wilson. The enigmatically titled new songs (âTwig Bucket,â âBurnt End,â âThatâs how it goes in the Relax Loungeâ) reflect things seen and experienced in Memphis, where Steve spent a week last Spring at the legendary Sam Phillips Recording Studio while Matt Ross-Spang (John Prine, Jason Isbell and Elvis Presley) mixed the record.
âPhantom Thresholdâ is best listened to from end to end as a complete experience. Like a great motion picture soundtrack, thereâs a story arc that begins as âCozy Cornersâ achieves liftoff with its mixture of sliding strings and celestial keyboards that owe as much to early seventies Pink Floyd as they do to John Fahey. Like a mildly psychedelic summer Saturday afternoon, musical themes appear, insinuate themselves, shimmer, fracture and flow away with a gentle tip of the hat as they make way for the next ideas to emerge. âPhantom Thresholdâ never lets up as it sketches out its vivid frontiers until finally Dawsonâs collective musical visions are deconstructed with âWhirlwind,â - an evocative, scratchy solo piece played on a Weissenborn with paper taped across the strings â that takes the listener home.
Historically, string based instrumental albums have been a tough sell. Theyâve got to engage, express a variety of moods and keep the listener coming back for more. âPhantom Thresholdâ does all of this in spades. It is a triumph that plays to all of Steve Dawsonâs considerable strengths and is destined to become one of the most enduring records in his already impressive discography.
Steve Dawson - pedal steel, acoustic and electric guitars, weissenborn, mellotron, mandotar
Jay Bellerose - drums and percussion
Jeremy Holmes - electric and upright bass
Fats Kaplin - fiddle and accordion
Chris Gestrin - piano, organ, wurlitzer, mellotron, moog, synths, pump organ
Daniel Lapp - violin, cornet
Release Date: August 12, 2022
Label: Black Hen Music
Producer: Steve Dawson
Engineers: Steve Dawson, Jennifer Condos, Sheldon Zaharko
Mixed By: Matt Ross-Spang at Sam Phillips Recording
Mastered By: Kim Rosen
Recorded In: Nashville, Vancouver, Los Angeles
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