Blending acoustic instruments, fast tempos, rich harmonies and rabble-rousing lyrics, The Haymarket Squares have been bringing punkgrass to audiences since 2009. “They’re smart. They’re funny. They’re raging against the machine in four-part harmony,” says the Arizona Republic of the group’s incisive lyrics and boundless live energy.
That range of styles and emotions characterizes The Haymarket Squares’ new album, Light It Up, due for release in February 2016. It’s a 12-song summation of the band’s musical influences and lyrical concerns, with tasty dollops of polka, gospel, and Latin percussion mixed into the group’s signature punkgrass sound.
While recalling choirs and chapels, “Heaven,” the album’s gospel-tinged opener, dismisses the idea of divine help and optimistically asserts the power of ordinary humans:
“There ain’t no heaven, got to make one here
No father, no son, no heavenly choir
Just hearts and hands and our desire.”
The urgent “Horrible Inventions” (driven by a blistering solo from slide guitarist Mark Allred) takes on the dirty business of unjust border policies:
“We got helicopters, quads and drones
Border towns becoming battle zones
There’s humans to catch and money to be made
From the victims of free trade.”
With an accordion providing a melancholy backdrop, Light It Up’s first single, “Let’s Start A Riot,” perfectly captures
the “crushing weight of boredom and responsibility” of adult life, as the narrator finds himself “sitting in a cubicle,
starting at a screen, playing with the lighter in the pocket of my jeans.”
The witty wordplay and pointed commentary continues throughout the rest of the album, touching on everything from surveillance (“No Such Agency”) to liberal guilt (“Part of the Problem”) to the end of the world (“Goodbye”).
Acoustic guitarist John Luther Norris somehow manages to mention Zapatistas, Japanese vending machines, and elephants in his Latin-infused “Jump the Border.” And no Haymarket Squares release would be complete without a love/hate ditty about their hometown of Phoenix, where there are “a million little places with local bands and beer,
to have a drink and wonder what the hell you’re doing here.”
Some of the songs on the album have been part of the band’s live show for years while others are recent arrivals. But they all share the same genesis: “We’ll hear or read something on the news that pisses us off, and a few days/
weeks/months later, a new song arrives,” laughs Mark Sunman, vocalist, and multi-instrumentalist who wrote several tracks on Light It Up. “For better or worse, there’s no shortage of inspiration out there,” adds Marc Oxborrow, who sings, plays bass, and wrote a number of songs on the album.
In 2015, The Haymarket Squares were nominated as Best Local Band by the Phoenix New Times, who called them “Phoenix’s original protest band” and “one of the most distinctly talented groups in town.”
And in 2010, less than two years after their humble Craigslist beginnings (a rare case where online matchmaking actually worked), The Haymarket Squares won the Train Tracks band competition in
Phoenix, beating out 50 other local acts in a year-long battle of acoustic performances on the city’s light rail system. “We’ve always been able to hold our own in that kind of setting,” says fiddle player Jayson James. “In fact, we end most shows by wading out into the crowd to play a few acoustic numbers.”
The Haymarket Squares are now playing on TMN Radio.