On June 5, Bond will release an album joined by pianist and producer Thomas Bartlett (Doveman), and covering songs by Ronee Blakley, Kate Bush, Leonard Cohen, Tracy Chapman, Joni Mitchell, Mark Eitzel and Brecht & Weill, among others. Bond will perform material from the album in a six-week residency (June 4-July 9) at the new Studio 54 cabaret venue, 54 Below.
Silver Wells is inspired by—and takes its name from—Joan Didion’s 1970 novel Play It as It Lays, which, according to Bond, is one of the writer’s most stark and powerful masterpieces. For the album, Bond set out to choose a group of songs that would allow v to “cover” the book’s themes of dislocation, nihilism, postmodernist identities, loss and the retrieval of memory.The songs are first-person and confessional, seemingly addressed from the narrator directly to the listener. As such, they lend themselves perfectly to the cabaret treatment they receive here: Almost all of the arrangements find Bond accompanied only by Bartlett, save for viola played by Maxim Moston (Elysian Fields, Antony and The Johnsons) on a few tracks, and a four-hands piano performance by Bartlett and Nico Muhly on “Talkin’ about a Revolution,” a favorite of Bond’s recent live shows.Videos