Jerry Joseph, Randy Newman, Kendrick Lamar and the Guilty Narrator
A Curmdugeon Column
Photo by Jason Thrasher, courtesy of September Gurl Music
Jerry Joseph’s powerful new album, The Beautiful Madness, is full of troubling songs, and perhaps the most troubling of all is “Dead Confederate.” For this track, Joseph assumes the persona of a toppled Confederate statue. He may be made of granite, but he’s not apologizing for any of the things he’s done: “selling the bodies of black boys and girls,” burning crosses on lawns and hanging men from trees. Maybe you pulled him down in 2020, but he swears, “I will rise again out on Highway 29.”
It’s a song guaranteed to offend a lot of folks. Right-wingers who argue that the old Confederacy and the New South have nothing to do with slavery and racism will be outraged by how firmly Joseph ties them all together. And left-wingers who insist that white supremacy should not be described in any terms but unambiguous condemnation will be outraged that Joseph has let this Civil War sculpture speak for itself.
So who is the audience for this song? It’s listeners who believe that human behavior is shaped not only by rational assessments of self-interest but also by the irrational impulses of emotion and psychology. It’s for listeners who believe that art can unveil the latter factors in a way that political debate and social-science research never can. It’s for listeners who believe they can learn more from the honest confessions of their enemies than from the recycled slogans of their allies. It’s for listeners who understand the difference between the author of a song and the narrator of a song.
That’s a small audience, but it’s an audience able to appreciate songwriting at its most sophisticated and potent. It’s an audience large enough to encourage our best songwriters to push irony to its outer boundaries where singers can speak the unspeakable, discomfit the most jaded and create the grand catharsis that is art’s most intense experience.
Joseph performs “Dead Confederate” with a percussive strum of his acoustic guitar and an echo-enhanced vocal that sounds like the bitter complaint from the bottom of a gravel pit. His duet partner on the song is Jason Isbell’s slide guitar, which enters and exits like Southern ghosts marching by. The more the statue defends his history in all his ornery cussedness, the more he damns his own “Lost Cause.”
Isbell, of course, is a former member of the Drive-By Truckers, the band that plays behind Joseph on the album’s other nine songs. The band’s co-founder, Patterson Hood, produced the project and added guitar, vocal harmonies and liner notes. In those notes, he says, “Let there be no misunderstanding: This song comes down hard against the evils of bigotry and hate but does so … while totally remaining in character throughout, boldly proclaiming its wrong-headed ideals in the face of a rightly (and long overdue) changing world.”
Using a guilty narrator like this accomplishes several things. Most obviously, it gives the sinner enough rope to hang himself. And it forces us to look at a situation not from our own perspective but from an entirely different one. Less obviously, if it’s done skillfully, it requires us to recognize the speaker as fully human. His conclusions may be different, but his impulses will seem uncomfortably familiar.
The dead Confederate may traffic in the chains, hoods and rope that we would never choose. But his pride of home and his suspicion of the other smolders inside all of us, whatever our race or gender. Many of us would like to pretend that racists and murderers are an alien species that has nothing in common with ours, but songs like this one disabuse us of that fantasy. It’s healthy to be reminded of the demons that lurk within us all, for only then can we guard against them.
“Dead Confederate” isn’t the only song on The Beautiful Madness to employ a guilty narrator. “I’m in Love with Hyrum Black” is sung by the young wife of a 19th-century Mormon soldier. She declares her complete devotion to her husband no matter how many Mexicans and Indians he kills, no matter how fanatical his religious justification becomes. Once again, we have a speaker who reveals more than she meant to, who leads us to very different conclusions than her own. The Truckers give the song a loping, mid-tempo, cowboy-rock feel that’s just right.
“Sugar Smacks” is Joseph’s sequel to Lou Reed’s “Heroin,” the confession of a drug addict so repelled by the sober world that he flees into the refuge of a chemical haze. “They said clean would make it better,” Joseph sings over the stomping beat and droning guitars of the Truckers channeling the Velvet Underground, “but I miss being filthy and the cover it provides.” As soon as you begin to sympathize with the narrator, he shoves you away by bragging about the time he threw his girlfriend “down the stairs.” He’s a monster, but he’s a human monster, and that’s what makes the song work.
In the liner notes, Hood describes “Dead Confederate” as “the worthy successor to ‘Rednecks,’” Randy Newman’s masterful song with a Southern segregationist as the guilty narrator. I was reminded of the first time I heard the latter song in 1974, back when I hadn’t yet become a working critic and still had my amateur status. It was at the Cellar Door, the legendary, basement folk club in Washington’s Georgetown neighborhood.