About The Lowest Pair
The Lowest Pair has
questions. The duo, made up of Kendl Winter and Palmer T. Lee, know that we
tend to see duality as a problem. We want life to be linear, working through
the dark to finally get to the light. Grief to joy, despair to hope, confusion
to clarity--not a jangly cycle we can't escape. But through their incandescent
folk songs, the Lowest Pair often ask: What if we sit with the mess? What if
that's not just more peaceful, but more magical, too?
"Fare thee well and go to
hell, I love you and I'm mad at you. It's such a theme in my life," Winter
says, then laughs. "Wishing things were different but loving all of it, too."
On their 8th album Always As
Young As We'll Ever Be, the Lowest Pair prove that over the last dozen years
together, they've become some of modern roots music's most mesmerizing,
thoughtful purveyors. Produced by Tucker Martine (The Decemberists), the 10-track
album puts the duo's stark lyricism, string-driven arrangements, and raw
compatibility on brilliant display.
"We're both trying to make
space for each other rather than crowd each other out," Lee says, reflecting on
why the Lowest Pair works. "We're doing a lot of listening and reacting to what
the other person is doing." Lee's speaking voice is a comforting echo of his
singing voice, soft and precise. Winter talks like she sings, too, sweet and
raspy. Heard together, the effect is both soothing and scintillating, like a
crisp mountain stream smoothing rocks.
The Lowest Pair's
musicianship is another beautiful testament not just to playing that breathes,
but playing that listens. Winter, who grew up in Arkansas but has lived in
Washington State for the last two decades, and Lee, a Minnesota native, first
gained attention as poetic singer-songwriters on banjos. While their family of
strings has expanded--Winter plays more guitar on the new record than she ever
has before--their fundamental approach hasn't: Respond to sounds and stories
the other is making.
That focus on active
listening anchored the recording of Always As Young As We'll Ever Be, too.
After years of self-production and limiting instruments to those played by
Winter and Lee themselves, the duo felt ready to collaborate with a bigger
circle. In addition to Martine helming boards, musicians including Leif
Karlstrom (fiddle), Sydney Nash (bass/piano) and Adam Roszkiewicz (guitar,
mandolin, synth) joined the recording session. "It was really thrilling to be
in the studio with that group because those are all really sharp listeners,"
says Winter. "I love us stripped back. That's the essence of our songs, but at
this point, recording wise, I felt excited about letting somebody else paint
with us."
Lee agrees. "For example,
J.T. Bates is fascinating as a drummer because he's paying so much attention to
lyrics and the story of the song."
As a result, Always As Young
As We'll Ever Be pulses with life. Album opener "Give It All Away" glows warm
and bright with strings and synths as Winter and Lee consider harsh seasons and
humanity's short memories. "It's this idea of cycles and knowing there's dark
and light, and it's
going to change," says
Winter. "When it's good, notice it. When it's bad, know it's going to change. I
spend a lot of time reminding myself that--and still being surprised by it."
Yearning "Diamonds" captures
the hunt for connection and beauty with heart-pounding grace, while "The
Uncertain Seas" rumbles through familiar feelings of doubt, frustration, and
longing using spine-tingling vocals and a pop-ready hook. "It's not knowing,
but also trying to give up caring about knowledge," Winter says. "Trying to be
okay with being uncertain--when it's so uncomfortable."
With hypnotic charm,
high-mountain strings, and a resolute chorus spurred by a chant, "What Is This"
snakes through the turmoil of craving action but needing patience. "I'm trying
to find the grace to let things unfold naturally," Lee says. "Watching them
unfold, not wanting to put a fingerprint on it."
Vivid natural imagery recurs
throughout Always As Young As We'll Ever Be, sometimes as a metaphor, sometimes
as a wild setting. "I'm obsessed with being outside," says Winter. "Trails.
Foraging. I'll go run 20 miles through the mountains and come back with
huckleberries and chanterelles. I love light--sunsets and the color changing.
Ripples on water."
Then, Winter points out that
Lee is often found writing on a porch. "Yeah, I prefer to be outside when I'm
writing," he says. "I want the smells and the sounds."
"Tiny Rebellions" is a
stylistic jolt, punctuated by electronic flourishes and thundering percussion.
Winter points to the song's underlying hope. "It's really knowing that anything
is possible, and that bearing something is grief and joy--the flip sides of the
heart," she says. "There's optimism, buried in the dark."
Masterful "Quantum Physics"
is a meditation, featuring stunning vocals that weave under and around each
other like subatomic particles. Inspired by an On Being podcast episode that
delved into concepts of time, Winter wrote the song to grapple with her own
understanding of love and loss. "I lost my father to early onset Alzheimer's in
2019. It was a 10-year battle," she says. "The idea of all time existing--not
necessarily being linear--makes me feel really good."
Another vocal showcase moored
to strings, "Casually Getting the Job Done" muses over what's done but not
said, while "Shitty Light" is a vulnerable reckoning with perspective and the
past. "Spilled Beans" swings with boozy strings and saloon-worthy piano while
weightier lyrics offer a sober counterpoint. "This one feels like a party--just
passing around a bottle of something, leaning back and listening to the piano,"
Winter says.
"I feel like it's a nice
juxtaposition," says Lee of the song. "The verses are kind of heavy, and the
chorus is too, but it's still optimistic. And then, leaning into the party is
the backdrop to the heaviness."
Winter initially wrote album
closer "Thorn" as an instrumental waltz. The song shimmers and sways, as the
Lowest Pair takes a poetic trope and twists it into imagery that's still
familiar, but
personal. It's a signature
send-off: somehow sad but hopeful, earnest and a little tongue-in-cheek.
"If I listen to somebody
else's record, it's easy for me to have favorite songs, but if it's something
we've made, it's about all the pieces being in relationship to the other
pieces," Lee says of the album. "It's about being okay with the heaviness and seeing
the light that's associated with the darkness. I hope it helps people not feel
alone in the heavy things."