
by Dylan Bolin
Willy Porter is on a journey; as are we all. Despite the archetypal
scripts we write for ourselves, Life rarely seems to listen to our
pitches. And while this drives most of us crazy, Willy embraces it; at
least for the purpose of his craft. Once in a while, during our
personal treks, we hear a resonant chord and a soft-spoken voice from
the ghost in the machine. It could be a moment of clarity or
transcendence, or, then again, it could be a Willy Porter tune. He observes his world like a boy drifting down a river in a raft,
and many regard his songs as snapshots of what he sees. I prefer to
think of them as sketches. (While a snapshot could be mere recorded
observation, a sketch always involves the artist’s active hand.) Some
are simple and minimalist attempts to capture a moment, while others
are abstractions inspired by a kind of Universal Honesty. His latest release,
How to Rob a Bank, is
true to form; and truth is something Willy has been searching for his
whole career. Where many song writers use the word “love,” Willy has
invariably replaced it with “truth.” It is, after all, the essence of
love. Would you rather be in love, or would you rather be in
true love? The theme recurs regularly throughout his entire discography, but
each song is a different sketch, produced during a different phase of
his growth. My favorite album, what I believe is his consummate
collection of sketches, is still
Falling Forward. What can I say; it resonated deeply and continues to. One example of his latest musical foray into the visual is the song
Too Big to Sell,
his homage to the painters who dared to see what no one else could.
And while many of their works are posthumously coveted, by accident or
design, others could not be. Willy is not blindly Pollyannaish, however. The richness of Willy’s
world, like that of Willy himself, is fluid. It does not consist
solely of blue skies and boundless freedom; there are briars and mud as
well. In renewal there is entropy, and in entropy there is death and
sorrow. Thankfully, Willy casts his unflinching third eye onto these
scenes as well. (If you can listen to
One More September off of
Available Light and not feel a lump in your throat, you likely aren’t human.)
Psychic Vampire off of his latest release is a
dysfunctional tale of codependence and our blind addiction to anyone
who offers to fill the desperate, empty places within us. And it’s got
an amazing hook. Every Willy Porter fan has experienced Willy’s soulful side, but Willy also possesses an impish sense of humor. In
How to Rob a Bank’s
title track, he transforms that twinkle in his eye into a snappy ditty
about unfettered greed with the sincerity and easy satire of a
new-millennium Woody Guthrie. Willy Porter is not about re-invention, but rather evolution; both
spiritually and artistically, and whether we choose to acknowledge it
or not, we too are on a similar journey, and often we don’t know where
or why. One day, we just woke up walking. We know that inertia will
eventually carry us to our final destination, and the curtain will ring
down. Along the way, we encounter shiny shards of fractured truth that
we attempt to reassemble into our purpose. Willy Porter’s
How to Rob a Bank is one more piece of the puzzle. -Dylan
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