Hallowed Ground

HALLOWED GROUND
 
 
Hallowed Ground  is the second album by Violent Femmes, released in June 1984.  Like the band’s first album, the songs were mostly written by singer/guitarist/lyricist Gordon Gano when he was in high school.  “Country Death Song”, for example, was based on a true story from an 1862 news article about a man who intentionally threw his daughter into a well and then hanged himself in his barn.  It was written by Gano during his 10th grade study hall.  The Christian-related lyrics on Hallowed Ground were thought by some to be sarcastic, but Gano is a devout Christian.  (More from Wikipedia)
 
 

While they never quite reached those heights again, their later albums explored Gordon Ganos upbringing as the son of a Baptist minister.  James Christopher Monger writes in Allmusic of their second album (released in 1984):  “After the surprise success of their landmark debut, Violent Femmes could have just released another collection of teen-rage punk songs disguised as folk, and coasted into the modern rock spotlight alongside contemporaries like the Modern Lovers and Talking Heads.  Instead they made Hallowed Ground, a hellfire-and-brimstone-beaten exorcism that both enraged and enthralled critics and fans alike.  Like Roger Waters purging himself of the memories of his father’s death through [the Pink Floyd albums] The Wall and The Final Cut, bandleader Gordon Gano uses the record to expel his love/hate relationship with religion, and the results are alternately breathtaking and terrifying. . . . 

 

“The album’s centerpiece, a searing indictment of loyalties broken and the snitches that break them, ‘Never Tell’ is the perfect balm for the bloody righteousness of youth; and when Gano screams, ‘I’ll stand right up in the heart of Hell / I never tell’, it’s hard not to stand right beside him.  Christian imagery aside, Hallowed Ground is not as polarizing as some make it out to be.  The band explores gothic Appalachian folk and child murder on the banjo-fueled ‘Country Death Song’, bawdy and bluesy Lou Reed-inflected infatuation on ‘Sweet Misery Blues’, and nuclear holocaust on the brooding title track [‘Hallowed Ground’], leaving little doubt that this is the same band that penned underground classics like ‘Gone Daddy Gone’ and ‘Add it Up’.  Even the decidedly politically uncorrect ‘Black Girls’, with its free jazz mid-section that includes everything from jaw harp to the screaming alto sax of John Zorn and the Horns of Dilemma, is full of the same smirk and swagger that made ‘Blister in the Sun’ the soundtrack to so many people’s halcyon days.” 

 

(November 2014)

 

Last edited: March 22, 2021