The sly maturity of Parker Millsaps lyrics and arranging and the dark wit and languorous intensity in his Americana songs are difficult to reconcile as he takes the stage. Hes a handsome figure, but you could almost call him scrawny, between the fiddle player and stand-up bass. Coming out of a devout Pentecostal upbringing in Oklahoma, Millsap reached drinking age as his self-titled album (technically, its his second) was starting to have impact last year.
Hes almost done working out songs for his next collection (likely release: early 2016), but onstage hes not leaving behind gems like Old Time Religion (a considered portrait of a serial murderer) or The Villain who wants out of his proscribed role in his lovers dreams. From the parking lot of a Taco Bell on the road thatll eventually get him to Forecastle, Millsap recently shared some voice time with LEO, starting with a comparison of how outdoor festivals compare with gigs that hes had at venues like Nashvilles legendary Ryman Auditorium.
Parker Millsap: Music has a lot to do with the context. For a festival, you do some songs that translate well outdoors. And when you can get away with more intimate and dynamic stuff in a room, you do that. I dont necessarily prefer one over another.
LEO: So name a song that didnt get the desired reaction when you played it outdoors. PM: Sometimes Forgive Me doesnt work as well. And The Villain but theres always somebody whos really listening, and thats who you play to. But [for] the audience as a whole, if youre outdoors, generally you try to keep the tempo up. I still like to do a ballad or two to see if people are paying attention, even when it doesnt work.
LEO: Are there covers in your set these days? PM: Usually when we do covers, theyre from the 20s and 30s. Most people havent heard them, so its like a new song but theres something familiar. Well do Nobody Knows You When Youre Down and Out and Theyre Red Hot, the old Robert Johnson song.
LEO: Some of your songs get described as Southern gothic or country noir. Do you get inspired for those through listening to music? Movies? Reading? PM: I consider myself an omnivore. At the time I wrote the last record, I was reading Steinbeck and Kurt Vonnegut basic storytelling, but also skeptical and with an outsider perspective. Thats where a lot comes from for me trying to figure out what its like in this guys shoes.
LEO: You had a very devotional upbringing. I take it theres criticism for applying your talents to a secular path? PM: Some people tell me, Youre doing the Lords work, and I figure they listened to Old Time Religion and only heard the chorus because others come up after the show and say, I really like how youre ribbing the religious communities there. Everybody will interpret the way they want and Im learning that you just have to let them [laughs].
LEO: A difficult lesson? PM: Its a little disorienting, when so many people get so many different things from your songs. I just like playing em. I wrote em when I wrote em, and theyre done.
Parker Millsap
Forecastle
Friday, July 17
Port Stage
1:45 p.m.