AL RIGGS
Hell House
Bull City Records Presents
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Al Riggs decided to name his record Hell House, but he also decided, it seems, to make a sonic home blanketed with gentle acoustic guitars, cushioned with mic fuzz, and carpeted with the soft patter of percussive shakers, rather than a home engulfed in noisy inferno.
Riggs has said that part of the impetus for his latest record was living in a punk house in Chapel Hill last year, and the accompanying dissonance of being an introvert suddenly thrust into the midst of a network of musical communities. This period of lifewhich began shortly before Donald Trump was elected presidentmay be specifically what the title alludes to, or it may refer to a more abstract conception of a tormented mental state. In any case, Riggsโs songs sound anything but hellish, and lack any sense of doom or despair. Rather, these songs invite and uplift, and even as they convey sorrow, act as channels for catharsis.
Opening track โGo When Youโre Lonesomeโ carries a certain sadness but also offers encouragement in the form of โa room to go when youโre lonesomeโan earnest lyric led by carefully plucked guitar lines. โChristmas Paradeโ is a simple, bouncy number based around raggedy drums, acoustic guitar strums, and a sentimental tale of being invited to an annual holiday parade. Even โBurning Next Door,โ one of Hell Houseโs more ominously titled songs, begins and ends with a celestial mรฉlange of effects-laden saxophones.
โLetโs have a room full of friends with it,โ Riggs talk-sings on โLetโs Have a Room.โ He does so with resolve, following the line shortly thereafter with, โIf you need some air, go get it,โ as if to say, โThis Hell House is filling with smoke, maybe you just need to step outside.โ Riggsโs latest is an offering of solace, a safe house built in reaction to time spent in a darker domain. The melodies are sometimes faint, the instrumentation sometimes sparse, but all the more welcoming in being so.


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