592. Going to Brazil

One of the oldest Mountain Goats songs is “Going to Brazil,” and it exists as a memory of times gone by.

Track: “Going to Brazil”
Album: Unreleased

One of the top results as of this writing for “Going to Brazil” is a horrible AI website that seems to churn out three paragraphs about every song. Above that, for me, is the wiki, which includes this show in 2010 in Oregon, where John Darnielle seems to have played part of the song during what I would assume is the solo set in the middle of a live show. There is also an archived mention on the defunct forums for the band where John Darnielle confirmed it as the first song in the series of “Going to…” songs. As of this afternoon as I write this, that is just about all there is in the world about this one.

I find that AI site so repellant because it has no heart. The person who updated the wiki with a setlist from a venue in Oregon from 13 years ago to make sure everyone knows this one song virtually no one else has ever heard was played, partially, at a show, has heart. It will only get harder as time goes on to confirm anything. For example, the comments on this one YouTube upload of this song are people arguing (politely) about the veracity of the claim that this is the oldest “Going to…” song. These are people who care, but more than that they are people who have spent time wondering about this stuff. These are people who listen to “Going to Brazil” and have wonder. Reward that wonder, when you see it. Experience it, when you can. The song itself is a nice piece of the past, but I am consumed today by the thought of the people who care about it.

591. Letter From a Motel

The Alpha Couple spends some time apart in “Letter From a Motel.”

Track: “Letter From a Motel”
Album: Unreleased

“Letter From a Motel” is an Alpha Couple song, for whatever that is worth, though the detail of “three daughters” complicates that reality. The Alpha Couple very famously has no children, as you might know from a song with that name, but they also exist inside and outside time. There is not one clear Alpha Couple storyline apart from Tallahassee, which also conflicts with some of the older songs in small ways. Once upon a time I would have wanted to break down those differences here and to wonder about “true continuity” or something but as with a lot of other things, this is mostly about vibes.

Our narrator is in a motel, one assumes, and they receive a letter from a partner that includes a picture of their home. “I did not mean to say what I’m saying now // if we’re gonna talk about what intentions were” contains so much more than most lines and it really opens up the mind of the person we’re dealing with, here. We can extrapolate that this person has abandoned their family, which includes three daughters in this version of this couple, and we certainly feel for the person sending this letter. But there’s just enough here to wonder, what about these photos causes that person to feel like the windows are getting soft with heat and that going back threatens their stability? Are those just the lies we tell ourselves to cover our own bad decisions?

590. Going to Palestine

Through brief images we get a snapshot of an evening in “Going to Palestine.”

Track: “Going to Palestine”
Album: Unreleased

There’s no further connection, I guess, but the Ingmar Bergman film Persona includes a scene where one of the characters watches a series of hard-to-watch images on television. Another watches a self-immolation during the Vietnam War. The film is about duality and how we view ourselves and, beyond that, who we even are, when we really get down to it. “Going to Palestine” opens with a character similarly hearing about a self-immolation that lights up the sky, poetically, generally, but brutally, here. “I could not stand to hear them say so,” our narrator says. They then describe some orange trees, which is certainly not a reference to anything but may call to mind that once upon a time, if they weren’t going to be the Mountain Goats, John Darnielle’s band was going to be called the Orange Trees. One imagines we wouldn’t be talking about this in that timeline, but maybe?

“Going to Palestine” is a live-only song that follows a template a lot of the Goats songs from the early 90s followed. One person tells us a shocking or surprising detail and then tells us what they see and hear. I tend to think about what might have inspired the imagery when I hear a song like this. Likely there was never someone with an actual orange blossom in their hair, but can’t you see it? What I love most about a short song like this is picturing the temperature on that night and trying to see this person. In the right mood, listening to this one, you can do it.

589. For the Krishnacore Bands

John Darnielle channels his inner Craig Finn to tell a very specific story in “For the Krishnacore Bands.”

Track: “For the Krishnacore Bands”
Album: Unreleased

John Darnielle has said that “For the Krishnacore Bands” is an attempt to write a song about a specific genre of music in the style of a Craig Finn song. That alone explains the mention of “Creeper Dave” at the end, because what is more of a Hold Steady thing than an unexplained, specific mention of a local that we never hear from again? In that vein, we also hear about the Fireside Bowl, a venue in Chicago where I once spent a bizarre New Year’s Eve and also some pretty good, unrelated afternoons.

Craig Finn, and the Holy Steady overall, writes about specific circumstances, mostly in Minnesota and surrounding areas, that feel like your own experiences if you tilt the camera a little bit. You didn’t meet Jester and Jules, of course, but you met someone who you only know as a first name that probably isn’t their real name. This isn’t your story, but it’s a story that rhymes. That specificity helps a lot with John Darnielle’s writing, as you almost certainly do not know what Krishnacore is. Maybe you do and maybe that’s projection, but I think the odds are you only have the context given in this song.

That’s enough, though! You hear the journey of someone trying to tell a message. John Darnielle was a member in his youth and even if you don’t know a thing about Krishna outside of this song, you don’t need to in order to follow it. This is about the story. Maybe you relate to it, even just the feeling of doubling down despite no one getting it. I suspect that part might ring true.

588. Heel Turn 1

The vibes are different between “Heel Turn 1” and “Heel Turn 2” but either way, you watch a transformation.

Track: “Heel Turn 1”
Album: Unreleased

You can hear the story behind “Heel Turn 1,” sorta, at this show in Alabama in 2018. You can then hear John Darnielle read the description of the song straight off of the Mountain Goats Wiki, which is a little surreal, as he looks up the lyrics. I’m on the record as finding these moments charming and this one is no exception. This is the 588th post on this site alone and we aren’t even talking about some of the more secret tracks, so you’ve gotta cut him some slack for not immediately remembering an obscure song that he purposefully did not release. I certainly don’t know every word, either. I love these moments.

“Heel Turn 2” is the much more brutal sequel that serves as the centerpiece for Beat the Champ. The former version is jangly and fun, in that way that a song about making someone beg for mercy can be fun through the stylings of John Darnielle and company. I have a buddy who loves the Goats almost as much as I do and he calls this one one of his all-time favorites.

Through “Heel Turn 1” we see a hero become a villain and, beyond that, we see their justification. The other one hit me first, they say, and it spirals from there. “Always help old ladies cross the street” is a cliché, but that’s the point. We need broad strokes in wrestling. We need to know, from the back of the auditorium (or gym, or VFW, or what have you) that this is the hero. Then we need to see them flip.

587. Tyler Lambert’s Grave

The Mountain Goats ask us to think beyond the headlines in “Tyler Lambert’s Grave.”

Track: “Tyler Lambert’s Grave”
Album: Unreleased (released by John Darnielle on Twitter)

Tyler Lambert was the son of Dana Plato, the former child star and subject of “Song for Dana Plato,” another Mountain Goats song. Dana Plato passed just a few years after that song was written and the band played it live a few times after her passing. The message is similar, though the tone obviously isn’t, and the sequence of events explains that. “Tyler Lambert’s Grave” was written, obviously, with the title, after his passing. Even with that difference and with the obvious differences in how the songs sound, these are more or less about the same thing.

A common thread through the real people that feature in Mountain Goats songs is that many of them appear to have simple stories but aren’t necessarily just what you know. Dana Plato and Tyler Lambert both died by suicide. There are dozens of songs that tie back to this idea of seeing yourself in someone else’s tragedy and variations of asking the listener to go one step beyond a cause of death. In the case of Tyler Lambert’s mother, maybe you know she was a child star and something about a robbery. Maybe that doesn’t naturally lead you to the hunger that causes you to risk everything for what seems to be very little. Maybe that doesn’t ask you to “step outside the shadow // of your great catastrophe,” but let it.

The Seattle News article where John Darnielle talked about this song is a dead link now. The People article sourced for the photo in the song is a dead link. The Tweet where this was released will, odds are, be a dead link soon. It all boils down to the simple pieces when the context is gone, so you have to take those steps yourself.

586. Going Invisible

We see behind the curtain to find someone preparing to take a small step in “Going Invisible.”

Track: “Going Invisible”
Album: Unreleased (posted as a demo by John Darnielle online in 2008)

Just under three years ago I wrote about “Going Invisible 2,” the “sequel” song to “Going Invisible,” which you probably could work out yourself based on the titles. The second one was part of In League with Dragons, an album that has aged very well in my estimation and is one of the best of the “modern” era. I initially called the second song an escalation from the first, with grander threats to burn everything down and booming instrumentation as compared to the quiet guitar and the almost “despondent” vocals. Not to take issue with myself, but I wonder upon listening to the first one if I still agree with that, exactly.

“Going Invisible,” the first one, was an unreleased track from Get Lonely that John Darnielle said was “a personal favorite.” As we reach the end of the discussion of non-album tracks (we have about 40 to go, if you’re counting) I have to keep going back to this idea of album construction and what it means to compare the songs that “made it” with those that didn’t. In this case, we know why: John Darnielle says the studio version they recorded wasn’t quite right. Get Lonely is, arguably, the most delicate Mountain Goats album, so you can understand that approach.

Today I would pick a different word than “despondent.” Certainly someone could find a better word, but this is someone who is more afraid — they are “fairly nearly ready” to go outside — than angry. Rage is an easier emotion to access than fear and this person is showing us the preparation it takes even to go out into a world that you’re still certain will not accept you, and not only that, but why would they, if they knew what was inside?

585. Going to Buffalo

Our narrator in “Going to Buffalo” has a lot to say about their partner, but it feels like an incomplete picture.

Track: “Going to Buffalo”
Album: Unreleased

At an Extra Glenns show in 1995 at The Empty Bottle, Franklin Bruno asked John Darnielle if he wanted to play a song that Bruno had just heard for the first time a few hours earlier. You can hear that here. The only other version of “Going to Buffalo” is part of a leak that someone found through a music sharing site. If it hadn’t been played live I would probably leave it off this list and honestly, it gets really murky here as we get into the final fifty songs.

The Empty Bottle is the first place I ever saw the Mountain Goats (though not that show) and it’s a really great venue, still. The Goats are playing bigger venues these days, but I encourage you to stop in for a beer at least if you’re ever in the area. The Goats played there more than a few times and while this was technically an Extra Glenns show, it’s the same vibe.

The two versions are slightly different and some lyrics get transposed but both versions find a typical Goats/Glenns narrator bitterly commenting about a partner, but, notably, also saying they plan to nuzzle up against them. We don’t have the whole story here, as we often don’t, but I imagine they protest too much.

584. Down Here Where the Bullet Bills Are

The existentialism of an enemy marking time for a hero fills “Down Here Where the Bullet Bills Are.”

Track: “Down Here Where the Bullet Bills Are”
Album: Unreleased (but included as part of an email newsletter from the band in 2019)

You could easily leave out “Down Here Where the Bullet Bills Are” from a series like this. The line of what is “a song” or what we’re “allowed” to talk about is blurry, anyway, but despite a rule about not talking about the adorable songs John Darnielle has written expressly to sing for his kids, I think this one “counts.”

It’s a short song about the life of an enemy from the Mushroom Kingdom of the Mario games, presumably Super Mario Odyssey given the details about a cap and the time this was recorded. There are other Mountain Goats songs that happen in the world of video games and, yes, even other songs that happen in the Mario universe. But this one works because it’s silly on the surface, with a title that came straight from John Darnielle’s son, but it’s also a sneaky commentary on what happens beyond the hop-and-bop world of Mario. I won’t try to make the case for this as some grand macabre statement about heroes and villains, but it does, at least, briefly make you wonder what life must be like as you wait your turn for the hero to come for you.

583. Warm Lonely Planet

The couple in “Warm Lonely Planet” spends a night outside in the rain on the precipice.

Track: “Warm Lonely Planet”
Album: Unreleased

There are a lot of Mountain Goats songs that take place on porches outside of houses in fields. We get a few details about the setting of “Warm Lonely Planet,” where the power is out from a storm and there’s live wires or other danger out in the yard and there’s water coming down all around two people who need to take shelter outside of their actual shelter. My grandparents lived in a house much like this one, in a cow pasture across the street from the childhood home of Johnny Cash. I can’t help but picture it for these two, though I assume the setting is closer to the Colo, Iowa world that was likely in Darnielle’s head when he wrote this song.

Supposedly it was written for All Hail West Texas and didn’t make the album and definitely you can still download it right here on Jon Nall’s website. If you’ve been in a house like this in the hottest months of the year you can appreciate what drove these two to the porch, though we’re left to speculate on the state of the couple. There’s sadness in Darnielle’s delivery, but it’s not rage or misery. “Give me what you know I need” suggests any number of things. It would be a stretch to call this a love song, but we don’t know enough about these two to box it in. Just picture that warm night and the multitude of other nights that got them there.