It’s a rare singer/songwriter that can credibly display dual sides of his musical personality-one who can quite thoroughly and convincingly operate in opposite realms of popular music. With Please Come Home, Dustin Kensrue joins those elite musical ranks.
If, at the moment, he is known primarily as the focal point of Thrice-a respected, conscious underground sensation, lauded for its virtuosity, power and creativity-Please Come Home stands to change all that. Indeed, with this batch of soul-searching acoustic songs, which range from the dark, philosophical and introspective to the tender, Kensrue is more likely to snare listeners more in tune with the work of Bruce Springsteen, Elvis Costello and Ryan Adams.
Built atop slabs of wisdom and hope, the songs meander from the […]
It’s a rare singer/songwriter that can credibly display dual sides of his musical personality-one who can quite thoroughly and convincingly operate in opposite realms of popular music. With Please Come Home, Dustin Kensrue joins those elite musical ranks.
If, at the moment, he is known primarily as the focal point of Thrice-a respected, conscious underground sensation, lauded for its virtuosity, power and creativity-Please Come Home stands to change all that. Indeed, with this batch of soul-searching acoustic songs, which range from the dark, philosophical and introspective to the tender, Kensrue is more likely to snare listeners more in tune with the work of Bruce Springsteen, Elvis Costello and Ryan Adams.
Built atop slabs of wisdom and hope, the songs meander from the lighter sounds of Ben Harper to the darker, more reflective music of Bright Eyes. At times awash in organ swirls and harmonica blasts, the disc’s eight songs are inhabited by sinners and saviors and we see this in Blood and Wine. In Pistol we find men who are morally confused and utterly lost, and hard-headed women whose love is like a rudder. Some old, some new, they retell the story of the wasteful son Please Come Home and examine feelings of self-worth.
“A lot of the material is a little more down to earth, which is one of things that I tried to do with these songs,” says Kensrue. “I get a little heady with the Thrice songs. And I like doing that-I think people like engaging in that-but I wanted these to be more folky, in the sense that this is music coming from a natural place.”
Born, raised and still residing in the famously superficial Orange County, California, Kensrue is an anomaly in the region’s musical scene. As a teenager who carried his acoustic guitar with him everywhere, his music in both spirit and substance owed more to East Coast music. And certainly Please Come Home is no different. Chocked full of the warmth and introspection of records by the likes of such praised singer/songwriters as Grant Lee Phillips or early, stark David Gray, its songs are thoughtful and hardly light.
In slow-burning ballads or fast-moving strummers, he splays himself open, unafraid to leave himself emotionally naked in songs like the brave, honest I Believe, which deals with coming to grips with faith.
In a sense, the songs filling Please Come Home took root when Kensrue, before his days in Thrice, busked on streets corners in Southern California, playing for change and for the thrill of the interaction with an audience, no matter how small.
Kensrue played sets of acoustic covers of songs by Counting Crows, U2, Elvis Costello, Johnny Cash and others, for friends for years. After having done a pair of brief solo acoustic tours in the Northeast and Southwest (including sold-out engagements in New York, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, San Diego and Orange County), the singer says Please Come Home eventually took shape when he found himself writing songs that didn’t necessarily fit within the Thrice context.
On Thrice’s last U.S. tour, he and guitarist Teppei Teranishi committed to bringing these ideas to life once off the road. Co-producing the disc, they hunkered down in the studio with friend and guitar tech Chris Jones, who played drums, slide and electric guitar on Please Come Home. Teranishi handled the organ and piano duties, while Kensrue played all the acoustic guitars and bass on the disc, whose songs were written to be blueprints: They’re structured, says the singer, so that they can be changed live, or effortlessly played with just an acoustic guitar.
“I wanted these songs at their core to work in that street-corner sense-just a guy with his guitar a voice and a story to tell. In the end, even with the other instruments, it is still an acoustic guitar based record,” he says. “It’s the foundation of each track, both musically and sonically, which I think is cool. On a lot of records, the acoustic gets E.Q.’d really thin and becomes a glorified percussion instrument, but we tried to keep it pretty full and upfront.”
“With only eight songs, it’s a little bit of an old-school record,” says Kensrue. “But it’s like the old LPs I love-a lot of them only had like eight, maybe nine songs. I like shorter records, I feel like you really get a sense of the whole feeling of the record, and you can kind of grasp it all in one gulp. Advances in technology have allowed for a longer recording, and as a result, people like to try and fill that space. And I don’t think it’s always necessary. Music shouldn’t be about quantity. I’m excited about it being shorter. It feels very complete to me.”
Hailing from a small, landlocked city in the middle of Orange County, Kensrue was raised by a father with a beefy record collection, and a mother who sent young Dustin to piano lessons, though all he really wanted to play was guitar. If he loved The Beatles and Michael Jackson as a pre-teen, punk changed his course as a teenager.
“With Thrice, it’s always an attempt to combine a lot of different feels and explore a lot of new territory-not that it’s not about writing good songs, but Please Come Home at its core is finding the heart of the song and playing it. It’s definitely more down to earth and less complex in certain ways…I’ve started simplifying things and getting a little more subtle or intimate.”
“As an artist, I always want to be as real and honest as I can be in the songs,” he continues. “I feel like where powerful songs come from-tapping something that’s inside of you, that actually means something to you, and getting that into the song-I think you can hear when a song is not from that place. I try to be an artist who aspires to find hope even in dark places: If I’m down, I don’t want to bring people down to that place with me. I’m looking for a way out.”
Dustin Kensrue