East Coulee don’t cut through Kentucky
Alberta, she ain’t in Missouri
but I know me some Dooleys from East Coulee
I know me some Dooleys from East Coulee
Father Tom is far from a fooly-ooly-oolish one
They moved a hundred head, John said on Tuesday
they’ll move hundreds more before the end of the week
and though I wear the scars from his birthday
they’re the kind that you’d wear so proudly on your cheek
Father Tom, mother Dani and sons
are far from fooly-oolish ones
Across the highway from the hoodoos
you got the Dooleys, yes you do
oh East Coulee, you got them hoodoos
but you got the Dooleys, so I’m jealous of you
East Coulee don’t cut through Kentucky
Alberta, she ain’t in Missouri
but I know me some Dooleys from East Coulee
I know me some Dooleys from East Coulee
And on the Badland ranch you find a bit of romance
watch for it on the silver screen
At the end of the rainbow, where the Willow Creek sage blows
climb the hill at sunset and feel the earth move
oh East Coulee, you got them hoodoos
but you got the Dooleys, so I’m jealous of you
I’m jealous of you
I’m jealous of you
and I’ll be seeing you soon
I never knew then, what’s true to my heart
things I still don’t know now, it’s known from the start
a better listener, loudly I talked
turning 10 days on into four days off
Thinking just about being stuck where you won’t stay
at least not for long
But the radio saved me, broadcast to my heart
another summer in Wintering Hills
Where I made some money, where I fled so fast
watching old lease roads, watching lovers pass
like a couple old flames, blown apart
could we dig that wick
could we summon a spark
Struggling just to hear what this river’s trying to tell me
steady as we flow
The radio saved me, broadcast to my heart
another summer in Wintering Hills
Where I made my money, I didn’t let it make me
I did almost die daily, but the radio saved me
Winding up and down along this crawling valley
Chasing signals, catching them in park
with the radio on, I knew it off by heart
off by heart
Death is an angel sent down from above
sent for the buds of the flowers we love
truly is so, for in heaven's own way
each soul is a flower in the master's bouquet
Loved ones are passing each day and each hour
passing away as the life of a flower
but everybody needs blossom some day
to bloom as a flower in the master's bouquet
Gathering flowers for the master's bouquet
beautiful flowers that will never decay
gathered by angels and carried away
forever to bloom in the master's bouquet
Let us be faithful till life's work is done
blooming with love till the reaper shall come
then we'll be gathered together someday
transplanted to bloom in the master's bouquet
Gathering flowers for the master's bouquet
beautiful flowers that will never decay
gathered by angels and carried away
forever to bloom in the master's bouquet
Gathering flowers for the master's bouquet
beautiful flowers that will never decay
gathered by angels and carried away
forever to bloom in the master's bouquet
Forever to bloom in the master's bouquet
about
The East Dooley EP marks a full-circle moment for Liquor Mountain frontman Danny Vescarelli. Born in the badlands of Drumheller, Alberta, he describes himself as a “CMT kid” who grew up taping his favourite videos by Clint Black and Garth Brooks on VHS. During a series of musical reinventions, Vescarelli’s heady psych-rock group Devonian Gardens released their sophomore album Solar Shifting with acclaimed Brooklyn label Beyond Beyond Is Beyond, yet country music was never far from his heart. On the latest collection from Liquor Mountain, Vescarelli’s twangy side-project formed in 2014, he embraces the pop country sounds of his youth while paying tribute to the people and places that made him.
For residents of Drumheller’s East Coulee region, the Dooleys loom large. Moving to Alberta from their roots in Kentucky and Missouri, the family’s Millarfield Farms remains one of the only historic ranches left in the province. Alongside providing his land as the setting for Shanghai Noon and Tom Cochrane’s video for “Life Is A Highway,” father Tom Dooley made waves as a political candidate taking aim at the commanding Conservative party. As Vescarelli sings, this family farm across the highway from the hoodoos was the playground of his childhood, as he forged a lifelong friendship with the younger John Dooley. Following teenage pit parties in the creek where Billy the Kid built a small town, Vescarelli and Dooley formed a garage-rock duo during college studies in Calgary, awakening their small town brains to the big city music scene.
Like the rancher moving a hundred head of cattle in the lyrics of lead single “East Dooley,” Vescarelli’s tender, high-pitched voice and jangly electric 12-string are trailed by a lively arrangement of instruments. On top of his long-time collaborators – rambling lead guitarist Steven Rozitis, dreamweaving vocalist Jennifer Crighton, and rock-steady bassist Adam Kamis – the lineup for this song is expanded with a murderer’s row of musical sharpshooters. Matty McKay, a five-time CCMA Guitar Player of the Year winner who has toured as Garth Brooks’ opener, blesses “East Dooley” with dreamy burbles of pedal steel. Drummer Clayton Smith, who has performed with artists such as Michael Rault, Ghost Woman, and Skinny Dick, lays down fills that accentuate but never overtake. Acoustic guitarist Nathan Godfrey is perhaps the most accomplished of all, bringing his vast knowledge as a folk historian to the liner notes of The Harry Smith B-Sides, and accompanying John Cohen of the New Lost City Ramblers – widely acknowledged as the subject of the Grateful Dead classic “Uncle John’s Band.”
Vescarelli cherishes the historic hoodoos and clay-rich soils of the East Coulee region, yet it’s the people populating the land that matter to him the most. “Father Tom is far from a fooly-ooly-oolish one” he sings, backed up by gorgeous harmonies that evoke the bluegrass-inflected country-rock of Dillard and Clark. The folkier influences of The Byrds, Neil Young, and New Riders of the Purple Sage have haunted Vescarelli’s previous bands, and while Clint Black’s song “Killin’ Time” is a staple of Liquor Mountain live sets, Vescarelli has never latched onto his childhood love of ’90s pop country like this before. With “East Dooley,” it’s finally time for him to come home.
“The crux of the song is that the area is amazing,” says Vescarelli. “It’s beautiful and you can watch the sunset there, but they’ve got the Dooleys, and that’s really why I love it. The lyrics almost become a people over place sentiment, but at the end I have a bit of a wink when I sing ‘and I’ll be seeing you soon.’ That means I’ll be back in East Coulee no matter what.”
The EP’s second song, “Wintering Hills,” draws on Vescarelli’s experience working in the titular region for two consecutive summers as a student employee at an oil and gas company. Distracted by the prospect of pursuing music, he recalls several close brushes with death during lengthy shifts on dangerous jobsites. “My head and heart weren’t in it,” Vescarelli admits, but as he sings in the song’s chorus, “the radio saved me / broadcast to my heart.” Driving to and from various locations in the surrounding valleys, the highlight of his 10 days on, four days off was chasing the signals of Calgary’s community radio stations CJSW and CKUA. “This is when I was having my musical awakening,” Vescarelli explains. “I don’t know if I can downplay how small the world can feel if you’re from a town like Drumheller in the pre-social media days. Every line of the song is a little nugget of my life.”
Alongside the influences of pop country, fiddle player Jeremy Gignoux gives “Wintering Hills” a uniquely off-kilter Cajun feel, inspired by the work of Doug Sahm and other musical pot stirrers. For the East Dooley EP’s third song, the band travels back even further with a cover of “Gathering Flowers for the Master’s Bouquet,” first recorded by Maddox Brothers and Rose in 1947, and later popularised by the Stanley Brothers and Hank Williams. Liquor Mountain’s droney yet melodic psych dirge interpretation—once again spotlighting the angelic voice of Jennifer Crighton with harmonies from guitarist Steve Rozitis and drummer Brendan Tincher—has a deeply personal meaning for Vescarelli; it was one of the last songs he performed for his mother during her days in palliative care. When other band members processed the grief of family members passing away during the time of their recording, Vescarelli says it punctuated the cycle of loss that ties the song together. “The idea is that we’re all flowers blooming,” he explains, and while he has a complicated relationship with his Catholic upbringing, Vescarelli loves the imagery of being “plucked for the master’s bouquet where we can all be together again.”
- Jesse Locke
credits
released October 24, 2023
Produced by Liquor Mountain
Recorded at Country Rock Heaven Studios
Mixed & mastered by Clayton Smith
Music performed by:
Danny Vescarelli - lead vocals; electric 12 string; acoustic guitar (2)
Steve Rozitis - lead guitar; vocals
Jennifer Crighton - vocals (1, 3)
Nathan Godfrey - acoustic guitar (1); bottleneck guitar (2); vocals (2)
Adam Kamis - bass
Clayton Smith - drums (1, 2)
Matty McKay - pedal steel (1)
Jeremy Gignoux - fiddle (2)
Brendan Tincher - drums (3); vocals (3)
Assistant recording & additional equipment provided by Brad Hawkins
Pedal steel recorded by Matty McKay at SonicVice
Album art by Boots Graham
Songs written by D. Vescarelli except "Gathering Flowers for the Master's Bouquet" (M. E. Baumgardner)
_
Thanks: Alberta Music; The Dooleys; and all of the loved ones especially those who have passed
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