Wareham explains in a prepared statement, “‘The Past Is Our Plaything’ was recorded at a studio on Stinson Beach, just north of San Francisco, in November 2020. The song sorta grew out of observations by Julian Barnes in my favorite book last year — the Man In the Red Coat — about a collection of dandies, drug addicts, artists and writers in belle epoque France and England."
The accompanying video was directed by L.A.-based artist Alexandra Cabral (Found Sound Dream Drama “Escape-Ism”). Listen/share “The Past Is Our Plaything” here.
Since the release of his last solo album, 2014’s Dean Wareham, Dean made a film soundtrack -- Mistress America -- with his wife, Britta Phillips, released an album and toured with his recently reunited group Luna.
With Phillips he has also been doing regular livestreams from their home in Los Angeles (a collection largely culled from those sets, Quarantine Tapes, was released in 2020). Yet I Have Nothing to Say to the Mayor of L.A. marks the first new songs Wareham has written in almost seven years. Considering a possible reason for the delay in original material, Wareham jokes “maybe it’s just too sunny in L.A.”
When it came down to it though it was really all just a matter of putting an album into the calendar and committing. A week of studio time opened up at Panoramic House in Stinson Beach, so he kicked it into high gear and got to work. “The hard thing is just to start,” he says. “When I sat down and did it, the songs came pretty quickly.”
Armed with a batch of songs, and ready with a couple covers — “Under Skys” by Lazy Smoke and “Duchess” by Scott Walker — Wareham decamped to the studio with producer Jason Quever (Beach House, Cass McCombs) and a tried and true duo of collaborators: Phillips on bass, vocals, and keys, and Roger Brogan on drums. Quever, an accomplished performer in his own right via his band Papercuts, also plays considerably on the album across a variety of instruments.
I Have Nothing to Say to the Mayor of L.A. is Wareham’s first singer/songwriter-style material in a long time and he says, “I feel like I really sang out more than I have in a while.”
The pandemic affected the album's creation.
“We were all inundated in politics, all swimming in that,” Wareham remembers. Of course, if you want to talk politics, the mayor of Los Angeles is mentioned right there in the title of the album, which is itself the first line of the single “The Past Is Our Plaything.” Wareham knows people are going to ask him about that — what would he have to say to the mayor, if given the chance? “It’s gonna happen,” he shrugs. “But the answer is right there too -- I have nothing to say.”
About Dean Wareham:
Dean Wareham burst on the scene in 1987 with his seminal indie-rock band Galaxie 500. After 4 years he left the band and founded Luna. They went on to release 7 studio albums, enjoying world-wide critical acclaim. Since they disbanded in 2005, Wareham has released albums with fellow Luna bandmate (and wife) Britta Phillips. The duo have also worked as film composers (Noah Baumbach films The Squid and the Whale and Mistress America). He released a self-titled album in 2014. The New Zealand-born Wareham has spent most of his life in New York City but moved to Los Angeles in 2013. He has also written a memoir Black Postcards and has appeared in several movies and TV shows.
Pre-order I Have Nothing To Say To The Mayor Of L.A. here.
Photo courtesy Grandstand HQ PR
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