Reviews

Honeyhoney: Billy Jack

Honeyhoney
Billy Jack
(Lost Highway)
[Rating: 3.5 stars]

At surface level, L.A. duo Honeyhoney seem fairly ordinary, even predictable. Pretty girl (Suzanne Santo) plus vaguely mysterious dude (Ben Jaffe) make charming, fiddle-soaked Americana filled with sugary melodies and backwoods charm, perfectly crafted for a lazy Sunday afternoon doodling the crossword at your local Starbucks. And none of that is false โ€“ Billy Jack, their second full-length album, is plenty cute (playing up the pairโ€™s flirtatious chemistry through close-knit harmonies), and, if anything, more straightforward than their genre-hopping debut, which traversed through spaghetti-western and drizzled retro-blues.

But with Billy Jack, Santo and Jaffe have arrived at a more focused, confident style โ€“ one propelled by its unusual, even startling, contrasts. Take, for example, their folky opener โ€œAngel Of Death.โ€ The sound is low-key and yawny, with Santo seemingly aching for a lost lover over a patiently strummed acoustic: โ€œFloating on the wind until I find you,โ€ she sings, โ€œI bury myself deep inside your heart / You wonโ€™t feel a change; weโ€™ll just become the same thing / But never spend a single day apart.โ€ Sounds sweet enough. But as the song plods along, injected with Santoโ€™s spot-on fiddle solo, the narratorโ€™s true purpose, and identity, gets hazier โ€“ and more menacing: โ€œYes, I guess there have been many others / Yes, Iโ€™ve treated them the same as you / And quick Iโ€™d let them die, and Iโ€™d lick the salty tears they cry / Many went from many to a few.โ€ I suppose knowing the songโ€™s title in advance ruins the lyrical surprise, but the duoโ€™s clever and patient wordplay is in full-force here, as they nimbly tight-rope walk the subtle, mirrored perspective between a heart-breakinโ€™ hussy and the Grim Reaper himself.

And while โ€œAngel Of Deathโ€โ€™s dichotomy blends perky folk and midnight-black words, Billy Jackโ€™s stirring closer โ€œThin Lineโ€ takes the exact opposite approach. โ€œI want whiskey when Iโ€™m sick and a man when Iโ€™m well,โ€ Santo admits, โ€œBut itโ€™s nice to have them both sometimes when I feel like raising hell.โ€ But thereโ€™s a different brand of hell raised on this insular epic, colored by Jaffeโ€™s dark, blooming six-strings, which erupt into noisy oblivion toward trackโ€™s end.

As Santo observes early on, โ€œthings are rarely ever what they seem.โ€ While Billy Jackโ€™s redneck title seems to suggest that Honeyhoney have smoothed over all of their weirder tendencies, thatโ€™s fairly inaccurate, even if the pairโ€™s eccentricities are more subtle and less self-conscious this time around. Instrumentally, Santo and Jaffe are mostly neck-deep in twang (Santoโ€™s wonderful banjo counter-melodies are particularly great), and their classic country influences shine blindingly through (Their unified harmonies on the bouncy โ€œI Donโ€™t Mindโ€ echo The Everly Brothers). But Billy Jack never sounds dated or placid: The gorgeous six-strings and pedal-steel layers that build and climb in the instrumental climax of โ€œTurn That Finger Aroundโ€ are downright psychedelic. Meanwhile, their slower, jazzier coffee-shop reveries like โ€œLA Riverโ€ and โ€œAll On Youโ€ are fairly lightweight by this albumโ€™s previously excellent precedent, even if they are quite lovely as they drip along.

But the overall quality on Billy Jack is dictated by lyrical inventiveness. When they retreat into vague โ€œLetโ€™s party!โ€ clunkiness, the wheels nearly fall off completely โ€“ โ€œLetโ€™s Get Wreckedโ€ throbs like vintage Johnny Cash, even if its full-throttle odes to โ€œgetting laidโ€ and โ€œburninโ€™ that sweet cloudโ€ feel stupid and tossed-off for a band with this much lyrical skill. The devilโ€™s in the details, and Honeyhoney make a huge impact when they get into specifics. โ€œI sold all your clothes to get rid of your smell,โ€ Santo reflects, harmonizing effortlessly with Jaffe over a quietly strummed acoustic, on โ€œDonโ€™t Know How.โ€ On the sticky-sweet โ€œOld School Friends,โ€ Jaffe briefly takes the lead with an ode equal parts hilarious and sad: โ€œI canโ€™t forget gettingโ€™ drunk in the woods / With some liquor stolen from the market shelf / I drank a whole plastic cherry coke bottle full of wine / And I thought I had killed myself.โ€ Itโ€™s hilarious, itโ€™s sad. And itโ€™s uncompromisingly beautiful.