Event Details
Christian Lee Hutson starts his new album Quitters with a laugh. In this follow up to his ANTI records debut, Beginners, Hutson moves away from the focus on growing up to the dread and complications of growing older. The laugh that announces Quitters
is the kind you’ll find at the end of John Huston films, one of
resignation and release, and somehow a cosmic laugh that says
“California,” a place where lonely people gather together like birds.
Across Quitters’ 13 tracks, Hutson crafts this portrait of the
place he’s from. In these short story-like songs, Hutson presents
characters who carry this golden light and sinister geography inside
them. It’s a place where everything in the end gets blown away and paved
over with something new, where even the ocean and fires are always
whispering, “One day we’ll take it all back.” This is a Los Angeles in
constant transition, where childhood is lost, where home is gone and can
never be visited again. Yet Hutson’s world is also one of happy
accidents, where doors are left open on purpose, hoping that someone new
will walk through. In the end, what’s left are these songs created by
some future spirit, written to comfort the person we are now.
Produced by Phoebe Bridgers and Conor Oberst, Quitters is also a departure from the digital recording of his debut. Hutson stated, “When we made Beginners
the aim was to make simple digital recordings of how I would play the
songs in the room. With this record, Phoebe and Conor had an idea that
it would be fun to make it to tape. Phoebe is my best friend and making Beginners with her was so comfortable and easy. So I wanted to work with her again.” “I took a long time with Beginners,” Hutson added. “I had those songs for 10 years, but these songs came out a lot faster.” Because the songs from Quitters were
written in a shorter time, “there was a little bit of insecurity with
the lyrics. Having Conor there served the purpose of someone who I
really respect as a lyricist and could soothe my anxiety.”
With Quitters, Hutson pulled from a wide range of influences
for his second record: the tight rhymes of John Prine, Bob Mehr’s book
about the Replacements Trouble Boys, and Scott McClanahan’s auto-fiction The Sarah Book. It’s a recording that also feels like a sonic expansion from Hutson’s debut.
“We made Quitters all at once. We hadn’t seen each other for
sixth months and this was the first time being in the room together
again. It was a real familial feeling, working with the same people,
playing with the same people where everyone gets so good at knowing one
another’s tricks and are complimenting one another’s weird mistakes. My
favorite records are when the guitar gets fucked up and then that
becomes the recorded version. And it’s those accidents that make them
special.”
The song “Rubberneckers” announces Huston’s two great themes: memory and
pain. Written along with his friend and artist Alex Lahey,
“Rubberneckers” was the last song written for the album. Huston said,
“After I made the record, I was thinking about marriage, about
codependency and lying to yourself. You like to think this is my life
and these are the parameters. You can’t even see you’re on this path
until you wind up in the darkest wood, but you keep walking because the
road is comfortable.” The song charts a relationship’s demise, through a
proposal, a rupture, and then ultimately a breakup. Hutson pointed
out,” It’s about the way that when your life is falling apart, friends
fixate on the falling apart rather than just providing support.” The
song also contains some of the album’s many perfect rhymes: Self-esteem vending machine/a doctor’s office magazine.
Yet, the song “Cherry” returns Hutson to some of the high school themes
from his first album. Hutson states, “I wrote that when we were mixing Beginners and is the first song that I wrote for this record.”
The song charts the ridiculous “cringey” lies we tell in our
adolescence. Hutson also pulled from memories of older friends from high
school. Hutson said, “I wanted to describe that part of growing up in
Los Angeles, having a cool older friend who will drive you speeding and
have you jump out on the roof of the car. These people who do these
flawed things and tell this type of lie.” However, Hutson’s gift is
describing these characters and the world they inhabit without
moralizing about it. He is less interested in the “why,” but in the
simple mystery of describing these remembered moments from a place.
Likewise, the song “Age Difference” allows Hutson to expand on the Los
Angeles character song tradition of Randy Newman and Harry Nilsson. The
track concerns a character who is finding that they are on the dark side of my thirties.
Hutson said, “There’s a specific type of an older man that I have
encountered a lot in LA. The aging rocker who hasn’t had a long
relationship and they are the McConaughey-like character who is dating a
much younger girl, and they have just stopped progressing.” Yet Hutson
refuses to pass judgment in a world filled with judgment. Hutson is
interested in describing the world the way it is, not the way we want it
to be.
So if every great record is a world, then this is Christian Lee Hutson’s
world. It’s a California filled with the fuzzy haze of a dream, and the
half-remembered moments of a forgotten life. Songs that say, “That was
so long ago, but I still remember you.” A world where the past is never
past, and the old people we once were still live inside the new people
we are. It’s a record brave enough to say, “In the good old days, when times were bad.”
But beyond the songs, it is this voice. The voice of someone who was
alive in 2021 and recorded a group of songs with his friends for us to
hear. And one day these people who shared these sounds will look back
and say, “We were all there for a moment? And we were young once,
weren’t we?” For there is a consolation prize. A breath on the window/A message that no one can see.
While the whole world seemed to be ending, we still listened to one
another. We tried to hear. And so we joined this sad laughter. Together.
- Bio by Scott McClanahan
Event Location
Casbah
2501 Kettner Blvd, San Diego, CA, 92101
Talent
Christian Lee Hutson
Jodi