Great Lakes Myth Society
Compass Rose Bouquet
Quack Media

"Heydays are passing/Your house has been rented several times over
by prettier girls," sings Great Lakes Myth Society’s Timothy Monger.
It’s a moody observation, but the band’s second album Compass Rose
Bouquet is loaded with tons more just like it. What seems to trouble
the songwriters of this Michigan outfit (Timothy shares vocal/songwriting
duties with brother James Christopher and Gregory Dean McIntosh) is
the past, yes, but more specifically, just what the hell we’re supposed
to do with all of the moments of our lives once they’re gone. Employing
the sweet delivery and nimble poeticism of Paul Simon, numbers like
"Heydays" and "Midwest Main Street" are particularly winning. Meanwhile,
the crunchy pop of "Summer Bonfire" and "Eastern Birds" sounds like
Dear 23-era Posies. But the album’s piece de resistance is "Queen
of the Barley Fool." A truly American number in both its imagery and
its folksy stomp, James Christopher sings: "I hear the jukebox playing
your Smithsonian Folkways tune/And all the drunks are singing and they
think they’re in love with you." It sounds like The Pogues being channeled
by The Decemberistsbut way, way better. While Great Lakes Myth Society
offer iconography culled from U.S. history, they also examine the bones
of a broken heart with CSI-like precision. Check out Timothy’s
post-mortem on the stunning "Stump Speech": "Ooh, love, are your nights
with him worth the seeds we’d sown?" So what does this all add up to?
Oh, nothing too bigjust a confirmation of mortality and the reminder
that everything in life is ephemeral and fleeting. "Our eyes turn to
glass and shine on blind," sings McIntosh on the sweeping six-minute
epic "The Gales Of 1838." In other words, the only way to remember
is to let go first. This is great American music.
Alex Green