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Ted Joyner and Grant Widmer knew they had balked before they even got home. In the Fall of
2021, Joyner and Widmerfor a dozen years, the beguiling garagepop pair known as
Generationalswrapped the second of two sessions in Georgia for a new EP. They’d opted out
of the process of filesharing they had used for years. Choosing instead to cut songs straight to
tape in Athens, a spiritual epicenter for their brand of twinkling tunes. The results sounded great,
but they didn’t think their songs were actually that exciting or up to snuff. Why busy everyone
else with the rigamarole of releasing a record when they weren’t convinced by it themselves?
Joyner and Widmer scrapped the sessions, relieved. The decision, after all, did not represent
some existential crisis for Generationals, some whatarewedoinghere panic; it was, instead, a
validation of trusting their process and respective enthusiasms, of releasing great records rather
than churning out substandard “content.” Before the veto was final, Joyner and Widmer were
working on songs they already knew passed that test.

Heatherhead is the winning result of that restart. Effortless and endearing, as settling as a long
hug from an old friend, Heatherhead is not only the best Generationals album yet but also the
one that, after all these years, finds Joyner and Widmer at last epitomizing their sound. These 11
songs are nofuss, nofiller manifestations of Generationals’ bittersweet beauty, of wouldbe rock
anthems made to feel like cozy sweaters. Maybe it’s the way the thick riff of the indelible “Dirt
Diamond” frames a vulnerable admission or how the taut rhythm section of “Hard Times for
Heatherhead” buoys a smitten plea, but this record at large feels like Joyner and Widmer digging
deeper into the juxtapositions that have long made Generationals so compellingdistinct but
familiar, wry but warm, soft but pointed. Heatherhead is the record Joyner and Widmer have
been pursuing from the start.

All was not lost down in Georgia, it seems, as the act of recording in the same room seemed to
shake something loose for Joyner and Widmer. With Joyner still in the band’s hometown of New
Orleans and Widmer now in Wisconsin, they’d grown comfortable passing everevolving tracks
back and forth, adding parts or offering suggestions to one another as albums steadily cohered.
They’d done compelling stuff that way, too. But after abandoning those inperson sessions, they
decided to commingle ideas earlier this time. Joyner escaped the Louisiana heat in June 2022 by
heading north, the two rendezvousing in Madison with loads of demos. They augmented one
another’s takes in real time, shaping songs that fell together like puzzle pieces. When a tornado
ripped through Widmer’s front yard and left them without power for days, they took it not as a
sign to stop but as an invitation to just enjoy still being the buds in Generationals, drinking warm
beer and listening to an emergency radio together.

Back in their respective quarters, Joyner and Widmer went to work with multiinstrumentalist,
producer, and pal Nick Krill (The War on Drugs, Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, Spinto Band),
creating a crosscountry filesharing triangle. They moved quickly, finishing Heatherheadtheir
sixth LP, but first in four yearsthat way in a mere matter of months. Despite all their fretting a
year earlier about making music together in a room, these songs somehow felt more
conversational and livedin, like two old pals throwing a few back and tunefully singing of toil
and joy. The true circumstances are ironic, given that, for 42 minutes, you feel like you’re right
there with them.
Indeed, these are the sorts of songs you want to stay with for a while, to crawl inside of and have
a look around for all the crafty details. Notice the way the sizzling little riff seems to bounce
between the walls of “Elena,” an enchanting collaboration with Sarah Jaffe that glows like a
woodstove in a winter cabin. Marvel at the muted funk of “Eutropius (Give Me Lies),”
particularly the way the byzantine drum lines percolate beneath Joyner’s cottoncandy falsetto.
And enjoy the marvelous seesaw of opener “Waking Moment,” a song that squeezes a dozen
dynamic shifts and at least half as many hooks into four minutes that are as cool as a breeze. You
can do this with every song on Heatherhead, limn those bits that give these seemingly billowing
tunes real ballast; you could, on the other hand, just let them surround you, seemingly simple
pleasures abounding.

“Closer to your death than to your birth,” Joyner sings during “Faster Than a Fever,” his voice
traced by springloaded drums and sighing keys. “You’re gonna be upset to miss your favorite
part.” It would be tempting for a band like Generationalsnow well into their second decade
to let such an anxious feeling override their instincts. That might mean putting out something
they didn’t love or reinventing their approach to chase a fanciful trend. To the contrary, Joyner
and Widmer now have a better understanding of who they want to be and how they want to
sound than ever before. You can hear it in every distinct but familiar, wry but warm, soft but
pointed second of Heatherheada perpetually renewing relationship that gave them the
wherewithal to pursue these 11 songs, apart and then together and apart again.
Ramesh by Eric Morales Color

Ramesh

Ramesh (Srivastava) is the frontman and main songwriter of Austin band Voxtrot, which formed in 2002 and has released a wide collection of albums, EPs, compilations and singles. In addition, he records and performs under the solo moniker “Ramesh” — 2022 full-length Eternal Spring was preceded by 2020 single Search for God, and 2014 album The King. When not singing his own tunes, he lends his hand as a songwriter, pitching songs into Nashville’s country music market and collaborating with artists such as Haim and Rostam.