That question having been explored in bold fashion on their 2011 debut “Let the 7Horse Run,” the blues duo returns with an even deeper sense of purpose on the follow-up, “Songs for a Voodoo Wedding” (due June 10). The larger question: What if the mission were not to locate rock ’n’ roll’s chewy center, but to find and channel their own personal identities?
“I’m a grown man with wants and needs and temptations and faults, and I’m not gonna be afraid to write about any of it,” says Leavitt, the singer/drummer whose sometimes-bawdy, always-honest narratives are filtered through an array of vintage microphones. “Everybody now wants to tell you how sensitive they are. Enough of that. Where’s the attitude? Where’s the swagger? If we can be a two-man Rolling Stones, I say we go for it.”
Adds Calio, who spent much of his career as a bassist before refining the finger-picking and slide skills asked of a blues guitarist: “I feel like on a base level this is what I’m all about as a human being. I feel like we’ve found a renewable source of energy.”
It’s all the more remarkable considering 7Horse started as a trial balloon, with Calio and Leavitt exchanging riffs, lyrics and song sketches via iPhone from their homes in Seattle and Los Angeles, respectively. Those ideas in hand, the pair blew through studio sessions that saw them arrange, refine and record one song per day. The results coursed with rawness and immediacy, and it’s a process they replicated in making “Songs for a Voodoo Wedding.”
Part of what informed the sophomore album, however, was the “quality” time Calio and Leavitt spent together in the interim. Though accustomed to touring in the relative luxury of a bus for much of their careers, the pair piled into a van to tour the U.S. behind their first record. On the vehicle’s stereo for most of the slog: The masters, such as Johnny Cash, Waylon Jennings, George Jones, Merle Haggard, along with early blues legends such as Little Walter.
“The more country we listened to, the more it percolated in me,” Calio says. “On the first record we were just creating the essence of the band right there in the studio and we had no well to go to. Now we have a really good idea of what we want to tap into.”
It was during the time between albums that 7Horse received the phone call that would change their lives — at least, the life of their new project. It was from a representative of director Martin Scorsese, saying that the single “Meth Lab Zoso Sticker” was being considered for use in the film “The Wolf of Wall Street.”
“Every night we were out playing like it was our last show, lugging our gear, putting our nose to the grindstone,” Calio says. “The movie was not a sure thing, but we weren’t going to sit around waiting for the phone to ring. We kept looking forward.”
The song ended up with a nice cameo in the movie, as well as an appearance in the trailer. “There’s a certain level of validation when Martin Scorsese thinks your song is good enough for his movie,” Calio says. “That was the proverbial shot in the arm. We weren’t looking for it, but we had done everything right. We’d worked our asses off. And sometimes stuff like that comes to you.”
The unfinished business of making “Songs for a Voodoo Wedding” awaited, and Leavitt and Calio attacked it with vigor. Sessions for the album were divided between three locales — In the Pocket Studios in Forestville, Calif.; Sage & Sound Recording in Hollywood; and Third Ward Records in Milwaukee. Each of the album’s 11 tracks were recorded live, with as little overdubbing as possible, with Jon Chi, Scott Gordon, Gregory Haldan and the band co-producing. The album was mixed by Dave Way and mastered by Howie Weinberg.
Much of the inspiration for the record came thanks to an actual voodoo wedding — some friends of Leavitt, in renewing their vows, staged one in New Orleans. The Big Easy is a city the drummer had visited often while on tour, but he’d never spent considerable time there. “It got the juices flowing,” Leavitt said. “You hear about how great New Orleans is, what a mecca it is … It’s all true. It’s exactly what I was looking for.”
Leavitt drew from the trip to conjure up the initial idea for the album’s first single, the country-fried “Flying High (With No ID).” Imagine negotiating airport security 1) having left your driver’s license at home, and 2) sucking on a cannabis lollipop. It adds a whole new meaning to reaching cruising altitude.
Other songs found their spark in the simple explorations of off-the-beaten-path New Orleans, the sights and sounds of which gave the co-writers plenty of fodder. “It’s inspiring just to walk down the streets there,” Leavitt says. “You are just overcome by the sense of freedom, and to embrace life. There’s a spirit you can’t find anywhere else.”
The Stonesy “Carousel Bar” was born during tours of the French Quarter. The pugilistic “Some MF” pulses with grooves inspired by the Rebirth Brass Band. And “Headhunter Blues” is testosterone-charged chin music with a baseball metaphor — “You’re comin’ up and in on me” represents an unflinching batter’s reaction to a high-and-inside fastball.
As if “Songs for a Voodoo Wedding” doesn’t sound boozy enough, there’s a song the duo hatched about Leavitt’s favorite drink, the predictably woozy “So Old-Fashioned.” Then there’s the other side, “Before the Flood,” a paean to the inevitable hangover.
But it’s the almost-boyish enthusiasm with which Leavitt and Calio undertook the album that shines through. One night during the Forestville sessions, Leavitt had an ah-ha moment and rushed out of bed toward the studio — only to run face-first into a sliding glass door, busting up his nose. On a side trip to San Francisco, Leavitt became smitten with a street musician playing a cane flute, so he asked the man to give him a lesson, recording it on his iPhone, naturally. Then he bought a cane flute and incorporated it into a song. And the album-closing ditty “A Friend in Weed” (“is a friend indeed” goes the rest of chorus) was written on the fly for a gig at a music festival in the town of Weed, Calif.
From Calio’s dirty blues licks to Leavitt’s earnest, unadorned vocals, “Songs for a Voodoo Wedding” sounds like the work of two guys who’ve turned over the soil and found the roots. In other hands, the barebones rocker “I Know the Meaning of Rock ’N Roll” would sound like an audacious declaration, but, as they say in country circles, this is not the duo’s first rodeo.
Even if, Calio points out, it doesn’t feel like a do-over.
“We don’t feel like this is the second bite off the apple,” he says. “That was a different apple. This is the one.”
Long Way
7Horse Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
i feel a little alright
looking through the back page
she looks a little underage
try to keep a secret
try to magnify the sun
gotta get down to mexico
but its a long way
a long long way to
try to get somewhere
you don't even know
yeah its a long way
a long long way to go
and then you're done
here in my brain
french sweater girls in the pouring rain
you walk through the lovebeast
like a hippie revival
your eyes on a minorflip
take some time
dont let it slip
you're an old familiar song
that i just can't remember
and its a long way
a long long way to
try to get somewhere
you don't even know
yeah its a long way
a long long way to go
and then you're done
then you're done
in a late marble car
in her mamas red coat
painting on mark bills
and the bad checks are road
try to keep a secret
try to magnify the sun
gotta get down to mexico
and get a few things done
but its a long way
a long long way to
try to get somewhere
you don't even know
yeah its a long way
a long long way to go
yeah its a long way
it's a long long way
The lyrics of 7Horse's "Long Way" paints a picture of a journey, a migration fraught with secrecy, danger, and uncertainty. The opening lines suggest that it's late at night, but the persona seems to be feeling okay with what's going on. They're scanning the back pages, perhaps looking for something or someone, and they see a girl who looks underage. The ambiguity of the situation adds to the theme of risk and taboo.
Then, the lyrics transition to the purpose of the journey: going to Mexico to get some things done. The persona is trying to keep it a secret, and he's willing to magnify the sun, literally and metaphorically, to achieve his objective. The chorus repeats the phrase "it's a long way," underscoring the distance, the arduousness of the journey, and the uncertainty of reaching the destination.
The subsequent stanzas add more layers of intrigue to the narrative. There are flashes of memories or a dream, with French sweater girls in the pouring rain, and walking through the lovebeast like a "hippie revival." These images could represent a yearning for freedom, a connection to a past or a cultural tradition, or a metaphor for something else entirely.
Overall, the lyrics of "Long Way" by 7Horse combine vivid imagery, cryptic storytelling, and an infectious beat that invites the listener to join the journey.
Line by Line Meaning
a little after midnight
Late at night, after most people have gone to bed
i feel a little alright
Feeling somewhat okay
looking through the back page
Browsing through the classifieds
she looks a little underage
The girl being checked out appears to be below legal age
try to keep a secret
Attempting to keep something hidden
try to magnify the sun
Trying to achieve the impossible
gotta get down to mexico
Need to travel to Mexico
and get a few things done
To accomplish some tasks
but its a long way
The distance to Mexico is quite far
a long long way to
A very considerable distance
try to get somewhere
Attempting to arrive at a destination
you don't even know
Not knowing where the destination is
and then you're done
If you don't succeed or arrive at the destination, it is game over
here in my brain
Inside the singer's mind
french sweater girls in the pouring rain
Recalling about some women while it was raining
you walk through the lovebeast
Being carefree and in love
like a hippie revival
Reflecting back on the hippie era and lifestyle
your eyes on a minorflip
Focusing on small details
take some time
To schedule some time to do something
dont let it slip
Making sure not to forget a plan or idea
you're an old familiar song
Recognizing someone or something from the past
that i just can't remember
But being unable to fully remember or recall it
in her mamas red coat
Wearing clothing from someone else's mother
painting on mark bills
Adding marks or symbols to currency bills
and the bad checks are road
Committing fraud by writing bad checks
yeah its a long way
Reiterating that the distance to Mexico is very far
it's a long long way
Underscoring the great distance once more
Writer(s): Philip M. Leavitt, Joie Calio
Contributed by Noah G. Suggest a correction in the comments below.