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Albums Of The Week: Hurray For The Riff Raff | The Past Is Still Alive

Some albums you only need to listen to once. This is not one of them. Take a spin through these folk-rock gems & hear for yourself. But don't say I didn't warn you.

THE EDITED PRESS RELEASE: “With the release of their latest and hmost liberating album to date, Hurray For The Riff Raff (aka Alynda Segarra) open the doorway to a language and world that are finally their own.

The Past Is Still Alive represents a new beginning in Segarra’s lauded evolution as a storyteller. During a period of pain and personal grief, they found inspiration in radical poetry, railroad culture, outsider art, the work of writer Eileen Myles, and the history of activist groups like Act Up and Gran Fury. Discovering a stronger, more singular style of writing, Segarra uses their lyrics as memory boxes to process their trauma, identity and dreams for the future.

They immortalize and say goodbye to those they have loved and lost, illustrate the many shapes and patterns of time’s passing, and honor the heartbroken and the hopeful parts of themselves, as they deliver a first-person telling of their life so far. It is both a memoir and a roadmap. And though The Past Is Still Alive was made in North Carolina and produced by Brad Cook (Bon Iver, Kevin Morby, Waxahatchee), the Bronx-born, New Orleans-based Segarra brings listeners to places far beyond: Vivid experiences of small shops and buffalo stampedes in Santa Fe, childhood road trips to Florida, struggles of addiction in the Lower East Side, days-long journeys to outrun the cops in Nebraska, and more across their most magnetic collection of songs yet.

The Past Is Still Alive is an album grappling with time, memory, love and loss, recorded in Durham, N.C., a month after losing my father,” Segarra says. “Alibi is a plea, a last-ditch effort to get through to someone you already know you’re gonna lose. It’s a song to myself, to my father, almost fooling myself because I know what’s done is done. But it feels good to beg. A reckoning with time and memory. The song is exhausted with loving someone so much it hurts. Addiction separates us. With memories of the Lower East Side in the early 2000s of my childhood, mixed with imagery of the endless West that calls to artists and wanderers.”

The followup to their acclaimed 2022 release Life On Earth — which landed on Best of 2022 lists far and wide — The Past Is Still Alive sees Hurray For The Riff Raff reunite with Cook while further expanding their creative cast of collaborators. Anjimile, Conor Oberst and S.G. Goodman all join Segarra on vocals at various points throughout the LP, with a band of musicians including Cook, Libby Rodenbough, Matt Douglas, Meg Duffy of Hand Habits, Mike Mogis, Phil Cook and Yan Westerlund. Mogis also mixed the album, and it was mastered by Heba Kadry.

The “nature punk” of Life On Earth marked a departure for Hurray For The Riff Raff, as they contemplated surviving and thriving amidst a world in crisis. The Past Is Still Alive brings the focus back inwards, with arrangements that are raw, melodies direct and indelible, and lyrics that are personal yet largely rooted in family and community. There are love songs to real characters, locations and mythic figures like Sky Red Hawk (Buffalo), the first trans woman Segarra ever met (Hawkmoon), queerness and sacred spaces for outsiders and the vulnerable, in the aftermath of the Club Q shooting (Colossus of Roads), leaving home behind and discovering oneself on the edge of the world (Snake Plant), short-lived romances and the wisdom gained through chaos (Vetiver). Elsewhere, in the self-portraits painted on Alibi, Ogallala and other highlights, Segarra reflects on the land they have traveled, the hardships witnessed and bravery gained while running away from everything and everyone they knew at age 17, hopping freight trains and hitchhiking across the country with a band of street urchins.”