From her early punk girl band days through her alt-country albums, through her ongoing work with the New Pornographers, Neko Caseโs torch-rocker voice has been her calling card. After Case released her fifth full-length studio album, Middle Cyclone , in late 2009, she told the New Yorkerโs Sasha Frere-Jones, โIโve never really listened to my voice and gone, โThat is a quality instrument.โ Itโs more like, โOkay, thatโs good and fucking loud.โ Iโm kind of the horn section of any band Iโm in.โ While her voice does take over a roomโwhen the New Pornographers opened their Together tour at the Bearsville Theater in May, her vocal instrument was amped up to 11โCaseโs solo work explores sonic textures outside her singing and showcases her visceral lyrics, which tend toward clipped narratives of raw emotion. โMagpie to the Morning,โ a slow burner from Middle Cyclone , opens with this moody set piece: โMagpie comes a-calling / drops a marble from the sky / tin roof sounds alarm / and wake up child. / Let this be a warning says the magpie to the morning / donโt let this fading summer pass you by.โ You can hear the urgent poignancy of the birdโs advice in the plaintive tone of a singer on the verge of turning 40. Especially when she sings it loud.
Neko Case will perform at the Bearsville Theater in Woodstock on February 1. Lost in the Trees will open. General admission tickets are $40. (845) 679-4406.
This article appears in January 2011.










