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Elsah, fronted by songwriter Neil Werries, borrows its name from a river town in southern Illinois. Originally from St. Louis via a relocation to Baton Rouge, Elsah blurs the boundaries between old-time country and guitar-driven indie rock. Werries' vocals range from a howl to a whisper, backed by a twin-guitar assault and a watertight rhythm section. Often compared to bands such as Drive-By-Truckers or early Wilco, the band cites influences ranging from Lucinda Williams to Camper Van Beethoven.
On their self titled EP they offer a more controlled affair, and where singer Neil Werries live had a wired Tom Petty thing going, he’s got more of a Stan Ridgway twang going on record. In fact, the Wall of Voodoo man’s solo albums are a good description of this album: solid songs, western via alternative rock guitar: songs that are epics in themselves. “Red Wine” is a killer song, rocking like that one big song by Dramamrama without being as corny. “Transformer” is a loud stormy number, echoing like the Cars on downers in a cistern, or something like that. “Morgan County” will make you long for the days of True Believers and Green on Red with its urban drifter feel. Sam Boykin Short (full disclosure: he’s a friend and a neighbor) is a great guitar player, one of those guys you catch yourself thinking “Goddamn, he’s a great guitar player” when you see him live, like I have a million times in his countless other local bands, but this configuration seems to serve him best. His sweet but still lethal strafing runs throughout the record, and particularly on “Propeller” are superb. If there is any band in my town I’d really like to see go big time, its this one. I think they got it in them. from the book Darkness Racket and Twang by Alex V. Cook
...Next up that evening was Elsah, still one of my favorite bands in town. They do the alt-country thing while retaining a sense of desperation and a loose grip on the tether. Neil Werries has a self-effacing authority on the songs he writes, like many of the Texas drinkers -- Townes van Zandt and Jerry Jeff Walker. The protagonist in the songs is not hell-bent on destruction, but does have an eye on the door, knowing bad news could walk in any minute. Like life, their songs have just enough melodrama in them to keep it interesting. Led by the dual threat of Boykin Short’s incendiary strafing runs on the guitar and Neil Werries’ raspy tales of love and whiskey, Elsah delivers a visceral and literary take on the genre. A recent deconstruction of the old blues staple “Satan, Your Kingdom Must Come Down” will go down as one of the more transcendent rock moments I’ve seen in years. 225 BatonRouge Magazine - Alex V. Cook
Elsah is:
for booking or additional info contact: neil@elsah.net | |||||||||||||||