Thursday, March 3, 2022

Twin Peaks' Ray Wise stars in Alex Izenberg's new "Egyptian Cadillac" video

Ray Wise, aka Leland Palmer, is well cast in the David Lynch-inspired clip for Alex Izenberg's new single "Egyptian Cadillac"


Here's the scoop...

Singer-songwriter Alex Izenberg has just announced the release of his third full-length album, I’m Not Here, due May 20 via Weird World which you can pre-order right here. Coinciding with the announcement is the release of new track “Egyptian Cadillac,” an upbeat, playful romp featuring woodwinds and a wailing guitar. It arrives with a video directed by Giraffe Studios (who did Cate Le Bon's creative "Remembering Me" and "Moderation" clips) and starring Ray Wise who played Leland Palmer in David Lynch’s cult TV classic, Twin Peaks.

Izenberg says, “I’m getting closer to making the unconscious conscious with this song and the others. It is difficult to just write when you are constantly bombarded with what is right or wrong, I’ve started looking within more so than before.”

Reading about Alex Izenberg, one picks up on repeated phrases, words like “enigmatic” and “reclusive'' applied to the Los Angeles songwriter. Izenberg transcends those quick descriptors and manages a paradoxical trick with his third LP, the majestic and floral pop opus I’m Not Here: he disappears completely while simultaneously revealing more of himself than ever before.  

Like his debut, 2016’s homespun Harlequin, and its ambitious 2020 follow-up Caravan Château, the new album inhabits the shaggy, world-weary mode of Izenberg’s favorite ‘70s artists, folks like Harry Nilsson, John Lennon, Randy Newman, and Lou Reed. Recorded at Tropico Studios, produced by Izenberg and Greg Hartunian, and mastered by Dave Cooley at Elysian Masters in Los Angeles, CA, its swelling string and woodwind arrangements—courtesy of collaborator Dave Longstreth of Dirty Projectors—bring to mind the technicolor sweep of Van Dyke Parks. 

Drawing inspiration from the writer and theologian Alan Watts, who wrote and spoke of life as a drama in which we put on and remove masks (or personas) to fit our moments, Izenberg’s new songs forged pathways toward universal awareness while retaining a sense of playfulness. Shifting between these modes, Izenberg’s songs recall one of Watts’ famous quotes: “You’re under no obligation to be the same person you were five minutes ago.” Tellingly, the cover of the album features the stark image of a mask, a nod to the malleable sense of identity that Izenberg explores on the album. “Above all, my biggest inspiration while writing this record was the idea of the joker, the one who can be any card in the deck,” Izenberg explains.  

Open about his diagnosis as a paranoid schizophrenic, Izenberg doesn’t shy away from complex topics in his music: heartbreak, confusion, and grief. Work on I’m Not Here began in earnest following the passing of his dog and best friend Larks, named for Larks’ Tongues in Aspic, the 1973 album by King Crimson, one of Izenberg’s favorite bands. With the world around him collapsing and his faithful companion gone, Izenberg settled deeply into himself and his imagination, looking for escape and reprieve. 

Check out the video for "Egyptian Cadillac" below. 


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