Jan
18

THE MOUNTAIN GOATS with Craig Finn + Bully

MAXXMUSIC, Neighborhood Theatre at Neighborhood Theatre

Charlotte, NC

Tickets
Online sales have closed. Tickets are available at the show.

Event Details

THE MOUNTAIN GOATS

Indie / Folk / Rock / Singer-Songwriter

Openers: Craig Finn + Bully


Doors 6pm / Show 7pm *See our bag policy*

Tickets: $45 - $55 (plus sales tax and service fee) *Reserved Seating & Advance tickets are available online only*

18+ Valid ID required for entry into venue / Under 18 permitted with parent (Accepted forms of ID: State Issued ID or Driver's License, Military ID, Passport.)


THE MOUNTAIN GOATS

Jenny from Thebes began its life as many albums by the Mountain Goats do, with John Darnielle

playing the piano until a lyric emerged. That lyric, “Jenny was a warrior / Jenny was a thief / Jenny hit

the corner clinic begging for relief,” became “Jenny III,” a song which laid down a challenge he’d never

taken up before: writing a sequel to one of his most beloved albums.


The Mountain Goats’ catalog is thick with recurring characters—Jenny, who originally appears in the

All Hail West Texas track bearing her name, as well as in “Straight Six” from Jam Eater Blues and

Transcendental Youth side two jam “Night Light,” is one of these, someone who enters a song

unexpectedly, pricking up the ears of fans who are keen on continuing the various narrative threads

running through the Mountain Goats’ discography before vanishing into the mist. In these songs, Jenny

is largely defined by her absence, and she is given that definition by other characters. She is running

from something. These features are beguiling, both to the characters who’ve told her story so far and to

the listener. They invite certain questions: Who is Jenny, really? What is she running from? Well, she’s a

warrior and a thief, and, this being an album by the Mountain Goats, it’s a safe bet whatever she’s

fleeing is something bad. Something catastrophically bad.


Jenny from Thebes is the story of Jenny, her southwestern ranch style house, the people for whom that

house is a place of safety, and the west Texas town that is uncomfortable with its existence. It is a story

about the individual and society, about safety and shelter and those who choose to provide care when

nobody else will.


This is what a follow-up to All Hail West Texas entails. But if you think about the Mountain Goats as they

were in 2001, when Darnielle wrote and recorded that album on his own, mostly into his Panasonic

RX-FT500 boombox, and how they are now as the recording and touring outfit of Darnielle, Peter

Hughes, Matt Douglas, and Jon Wurster, you may find yourself asking how. That occurred to Darnielle,

too.


“If we’re going to do a sequel to a record that was recorded almost entirely on a boombox,” he asks,

“why not do the opposite and make it as big as possible?”


Decamping to Tulsa, Oklahoma’s legendary The Church Studio with Grammy-winning

producer/engineer Trina Shoemaker (Sheryl Crow’s The Globe Sessions), that is exactly what the

Mountain Goats did. Jenny from Thebes is a lush collection of showtunes, pushing Darnielle as a vocalist

and the Mountain Goats as a band, broadening their sonic palette once again by leaning into influences

like Godspell, Jim Steinman, and The Cars. The resulting album cuts a path that is simultaneously full of

allusions longtime Mountain Goats fans will spin entire mythologies from while also being their most

inviting record for those who’ve yet to be converted to the cause.


Lifted by Matt Douglas’ horn and string arrangements, the dreamy guitar of Bully leader (and Bleed Out

producer) Alicia Bognanno, and backing vocals from Kathy Valentine of The Go-Go’s (“Only One Way,”

“Same as Cash,” “Going to Dallas”) and Matt Nathanson (“Fresh Tattoo”), Jenny from Thebes is a

widescreen musical in scope, a melodrama of richly detailed characters and sweeping emotions.

The west Texas the Mountain Goats conjure for Jenny is huge and already crumbling to the ground

when we meet her in lead single “Clean Slate,” where a new arrival to the safehouse finds it nearly full,

his host beyond exhaustion. Her burdens are heavy, and the measures they cause her to take have

consequences that scale well beyond anything she could have anticipated when she decided to open

her home to others. Such gestures are noble and doomed.


“You can’t be the person everyone relies on to take care of them and keep them safe for too long,”

Darnielle says of the reality of these spaces. “It eventually causes so much stress that it threatens to

break you.”


Ironically, that same stress makes it impossible for Jenny to see that she’s on the verge of being broken

until it’s too late. Explaining the title of the album, Darnielle notes that Jenny is not unlike a character

from Greek literature, someone on the verge of an unimaginable tragedy whose signs and portents will

not make themselves known to her until she finds herself amidst the wreckage. “These things never

happen in isolation,” he says. “One bad event leads to and is the reason for another bad event. Jenny

should know that you can’t keep a safehouse in a west Texas town, but she’s too wrapped up in the

process and has to go through the loss to understand how it happened.”


Whether or not she comes to understand how it happened, the events of Jenny from Thebes set Jenny

on the run. A woman and her custom yellow and black Kawasaki held in the memories of a vanishing

few, someone who held the gate for as long as she could, as a warrior might, before disappearing into

the night like a thief.


Schedule: 

7:00 - Bully

7:45 - Craig Finn

8:30 - The Mountain Goats


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Event Location

Directions

Neighborhood Theatre

511 E. 36th St., Charlotte, NC, 28205-1103

Show Map

View 511 E. 36th St. in a larger map

Talent

THE MOUNTAIN GOATS

CRAIG FINN / BULLY