Blitzen Trapper: Wild Mountain Nation

Portland natives Blitzen Trapper have always enjoyed blurring the lines between their own unique experimentation and what their traditionalist contemporaries might consider musical schizophrenia. With Wild Mountain Nation, their self-released follow-up to their 2004 release Field Rexx, these grizzlies takes their mish mash of mountain-man bluegrass, country, and outer-space electronics to a new, messy level of weird.

Like Jackson Pollack, the band generates a sound that is clearly inspired by the moment. Sometimes this artistic looseness demonstrates itself to be a fairly successful means of song writing, as with Wild Mountain Nation’s title track, a cruising Lynyrd Skynyrd twanger that grooves along a prominent slide guitar.

It even brings out the album’s best song, “Country Caravan,” a campfire jamboree that begs for a stomping sing-along. Other times it yields results like the bizarre “Woof & Warp Of The Quiet Giant’s Hem,” a jumbled chaos of distorted riffs, vocal yeah-yeah-yeahs, and animal howling that just seems like a noisy waste of good four-track production tape.

Listening to Blitzen Trapper is like listening to a conversation with a crazy, old prospector who’s finally decided to come down off the mountainside. Though he’s got a few nuggets of gold in his pocket, you can’t deny there’s something mighty strange about him.

– Mike Hilleary
Blitzen Trapper