This year, Ghost Light got gritty. Awful Feelings, their Valentine’s Day release that earned a spot as our July Album of the Month, wore a more powerful, roughed-up sound on its sleeve. Between that and the exuberantly stormy performances with their newly filled out lineup, it has certainly been a breakout year for Ghost Light. - Alyssa Greenberg
Ghost Light began as the solo project of multi-instrumentalist Barrett Lindgren, and has evolved into a rockin’ quartet. Taking the intimacy of Lindgren’s rich confessional-style vocals and placing it in broad instrumental spaces, the band allows the musical experience to expand as its leader opens himself up to the audience. While the songs, in moments, take a traditional folky route, it has a depth exemplified by a layered instrumental approach that is set off by free-falling percussion. (BTW: Jarret Nathan is a beast on drums - sooooo good!) Ghost Light will be illuminating the stage at Kung Fu Necktie tonight opening for Northampton, Massachusetts native Jason Anderson, whose throwback soulful rock ‘n’ roll endears in its hearty delivery. Kung Fu Necktie, 1250 N. Front St., 8pm, $5, 21+ (Photo by Zach Blum) - Michael Colavita
On Ghost Light’s latest release Awful Feelings, multi-instrumentalist Barrett Lindgren creates beautifully cathartic pieces of art. Having put together a full band to fill out his hermetic sound, the once quintet turned quartet provides vibrant interpretations of his songs with intense percussion and blistering guitar work intertwining effortlessly with Lindgren’s deep, rich vocals. Pay close attention to this project. You won’t regret it. Ghost Light will be performing tonight at DIY space The Great Indoors with local avant-garde outfit Hermit Thrushes and Brooklyn’s SoftSpot. The Great Indoors, (Please contact one of the acts or the venue for more deets.), $5, 7pm, All Ages - Q.D. Tran
Introspection has been kind to Ghost Light’s Barrett Lindgren, but there comes a point when solitude loses its appeal and the need for companionship prevails. After a winter spent ruminating, he has let the whole world into his cramped West Philly bedroom by sharing the glacial, hermetic sounds found on his latest EP Awful Feelings, which was released via Single Girl Married Girl Records on Valentine’s Day.
Lindgren couches mournful accusations in a lush backdrop of glockenspiel, banjo and chimes. He’s blunt as never before, serving up songs that deal as much with battling self-pity as with heartbreak. The house where Lindgren wrote the songs has a heavy presence on the album, and not merely in the echoes or the way his almost stentorian voice sounds like he’s calling to you from the top of the stairs. Domesticity reigns on Awful Feelings; beds, windows, chairs - all come into play, as if he’s trying to reclaim them from someone’s memory and build a life anew.
The EP starts with “You Already Know,” a stalwart of Ghost Light’s previous material. The song’s distinctive beginning, with that garbled synth seesawing back and forth, is now jolted into fullness by handclaps and Jarret Nathan’s militant drums. The repetition of the title sinks reproachfully into the chopping, slashing beat. In “Strangers,” the wintry gallop and twinkle of bells is at odds with a dark, wistful melody, and what are bound to be a lot of people’s favorite lyrics: “Although I barely know you, I think it’s safe to say, that we’re better off as strangers… and even though you are a rich kid, with the poorest excuses for problems, I really thought you needed me to solve them.” It’s clear: Lindgren’s over being someone’s fall guy. But it’s easier said than done to forego past comforts: occasional, arresting moments of vulnerability break through on the EP. “Can’t you tell me where the problem’s at?” Lindgren later pleads, even after he’s determined to stop taking on the burdens of others. “There are times when I still wait for you to call.” On the next track, “Leave It Alone” has a downtrodden country feel and even more somber lyrics. “And I was already dead when you found me,” he tells the subject. “I’m bitter, and you know it. I want to rest today.” This song has some of his harshest barbs yet. “So you ran back to New York, to lick wounds and write songs, to get it all wrong. You found a place in your parents’ apartment to sing back to your teenage years, ignore all your fears.” He’s done suffering for those who would rather rest on their privilege than deal with their problems. The album’s closer “Your Caves” begins with a lonesome guitar figure, and becomes a testament to past hurts and present desires. Lindgren longs for a relationship where he’s safe to project his own ideas free of disillusionment: “You are an empty home, where I want to live alone. I don’t need bother. There is a tight, taut string, and I’m recoiling in fear of everything… Where did you hide the light? Where is your bed tonight?”
Awful Feelings carries off a nimble balancing act between the Ghost Light of the past and Lindgren’s possible future directions. It feels transient, but not confused. “I don’t want to make mistakes just to stay in control,” Lindgren sings in his final lament, and watching him and his new full band (consisting of Nathan, Alex DeFeo, Josh Beaver, and Bill Rooney) expand on this newfound maturity while grappling the old fears and wounds is a promising thought. - Alyssa Greenberg
Introspection has been kind to Ghost Light’s Barrett Lindgren, but there comes a point when solitude loses its appeal and the need for companionship prevails. After a winter spent ruminating, he has let the whole world into his cramped West Philly bedroom by sharing the glacial, hermetic sounds found on his latest EP Awful Feelings, which was released via Single Girl Married Girl Records on Valentine’s Day.
Lindgren couches mournful accusations in a lush backdrop of glockenspiel, banjo and chimes. He’s blunt as never before, serving up songs that deal as much with battling self-pity as with heartbreak. The house where Lindgren wrote the songs has a heavy presence on the album, and not merely in the echoes or the way his almost stentorian voice sounds like he’s calling to you from the top of the stairs. Domesticity reigns on Awful Feelings; beds, windows, chairs - all come into play, as if he’s trying to reclaim them from someone’s memory and build a life anew.
The EP starts with “You Already Know,” a stalwart of Ghost Light’s previous material. The song’s distinctive beginning, with that garbled synth seesawing back and forth, is now jolted into fullness by handclaps and Jarret Nathan’s militant drums. The repetition of the title sinks reproachfully into the chopping, slashing beat. In “Strangers,” the wintry gallop and twinkle of bells is at odds with a dark, wistful melody, and what are bound to be a lot of people’s favorite lyrics: “Although I barely know you, I think it’s safe to say, that we’re better off as strangers… and even though you are a rich kid, with the poorest excuses for problems, I really thought you needed me to solve them.” It’s clear: Lindgren’s over being someone’s fall guy. But it’s easier said than done to forego past comforts: occasional, arresting moments of vulnerability break through on the EP. “Can’t you tell me where the problem’s at?” Lindgren later pleads, even after he’s determined to stop taking on the burdens of others. “There are times when I still wait for you to call.” On the next track, “Leave It Alone” has a downtrodden country feel and even more somber lyrics. “And I was already dead when you found me,” he tells the subject. “I’m bitter, and you know it. I want to rest today.” This song has some of his harshest barbs yet. “So you ran back to New York, to lick wounds and write songs, to get it all wrong. You found a place in your parents’ apartment to sing back to your teenage years, ignore all your fears.” He’s done suffering for those who would rather rest on their privilege than deal with their problems. The album’s closer “Your Caves” begins with a lonesome guitar figure, and becomes a testament to past hurts and present desires. Lindgren longs for a relationship where he’s safe to project his own ideas free of disillusionment: “You are an empty home, where I want to live alone. I don’t need bother. There is a tight, taut string, and I’m recoiling in fear of everything… Where did you hide the light? Where is your bed tonight?”
Awful Feelings carries off a nimble balancing act between the Ghost Light of the past and Lindgren’s possible future directions. It feels transient, but not confused. “I don’t want to make mistakes just to stay in control,” Lindgren sings in his final lament, and watching him and his new full band (consisting of Nathan, Alex DeFeo, Josh Beaver, and Bill Rooney) expand on this newfound maturity while grappling the old fears and wounds is a promising thought. - Alyssa Greenberg
There is always something happening in summer. It is a time of infinite choices and less rigid structures, which can become overwhelming. Ghost Light’s songs convey that feeling of freeness, but also the sadness of not knowing what to do with that time. What started out as a solo project of Barrett Lindgren has evolved into a full band currently on the Single Girl Married Girl label. His rich voice sings of angst that he feels but has accepted with lines like “even though you are a rich kid with the poorest excuse for problems, I really thought you needed me to solve them.” Don’t let that bum you out. Ghost Light is a joyful depression, a welcomed sadness. The band will be opening tonight at Johnny Brenda’s for Saddle Creek Records’ Mynabirds, the electronic bluesy music of Laura Burhenn that is filled with primitive beats. Also on the bill is Sean Bones who shares some of the summer vibes, but with a more dazed out feeling and tinted with the sounds of surf and reggae. Johnny Brenda’s, 1201 N. Frankford Ave., 9pm, $10, 21+ - Maura Filoromo
Below is a new track from Ghost Light (a.k.a. Barrett Lindgren) called “You Already Know,” which you can download below. It is off his latest EP Awful Feelings that is available on cassette (and to download) via Single Girl Married Girl. The album “represents a Winter full of depression, anxiety, and loneliness. It also represents the finality of Ghost Light as a solo endeavor.” Lindgren is now backed by a full band on stage consisting of Jarret Nathan, Alex DeFeo, Josh Beaver, and Bill Rooney.