She’s blonde and petite, and if it weren’t for those spiky dreads pulled back into play­ful pony­tails, you’d think she was the girl next door in her sheer bur­gundy top and casual jeans. Her voice sounds like a muted trum­pet through the micro­phone. This isn’t some fancy meta­phor: she’s threaded the signal through a guitar pedal, twis­ted and peaked and dis­tor­ted it until the gos­samer sound of angels emerges every time she opens her mouth. Even her name is out of this world: Ember Swift.
She’s one of the hot­test faces of a new school of music. She calls it folk-punk, but it’s a far cry from the merry jigs in the tavern that most asso­ci­ate with folk and more coun­try hoe-down than most asso­ci­ate with punk. And the key dif­fer­ence? The ser­i­ous tech.
Strangely, this new form of elec­tronic folk fusion makes for a wild night. Why is it only here at this junc­tion that polit­ical fer­vour meets exper­i­ment­a­tion? Lyn­dell Mac­gregor, Swift’s bass player, bows her guitar, pro­du­cing unearthly tones. She’s a one woman drum n’ bass outfit, tap­ping the side of the bow against the wood for the beat, hit­ting the strings for rever­ber­at­ing effect. She plays an elec­tric violin, bizarre black rod with no body what­so­ever. Like other bands, these guys could not play an acous­tic gig. At least, not like this.
Years ago, I went to see Michael Franti in his then-band Dis­pos­able Heroes of Hiphop­risy. Like Swift, the band relied on tech, tech and then a bit more tech. For them, it was early sampling, scratched in speeches from cor­rupt Cali­for­nian gubern­mental can­did­ates and teevee inform­er­cials. For some reason, the elec­tron­ics that night at Selina’s failed, and the band was forced to play raw, unpro­cessed. As anyone who’s heard Franti’s new Songs from the Front Porch will know, the sound was still incred­ible, the power of the voices and the anger and know­ledge in the lyrics still moving and intense.
No, tech­no­logy doesn’t hold up new music; it’s not a crutch or a cover for lack of talent. The truly tal­en­ted just use whatever they can get their hands on to get their mes­sage across. With Swift and Mac­gregor, that’s any­thing from the polit­ics of veget­ari­an­ism to the war in Iraq, boink­ing the bride and all the way back again to drought and land man­age­ment. What is it with these tal­en­ted women and their abil­ity to make even anguish toe-tap­ping? As the old slogan goes, it’s not my revolu­tion if I can’t dance to it. And I can tell you now, last night, my feet didn’t stop once.