The Pinkerton Raid's new album The Highway Moves the World available now

Article Contributed by Myth Maker PR | Published on Wednesday, February 1, 2023

The Pinkerton Raid—project of Durham, N.C., singer & guitarist Jesse James DeConto—has released the new music video for "Blood in My Eyes" via Flagpole Magazine. Starring two young ballet dancers, the video, DeConto told Flagpole, is an attempt to capture the physicality of the feeling of betrayal. "I had the idea that we should cast children," he says, "as a reminder that we’re all vulnerable and that none of us deserve to be treated badly."
 
"Processing a disintegrating friendship, 'Blood in My Eyes' specifically confronts the complexity of emotions that can surface when having a conflict with a loved one," Flagpole's Jessica Smith writes. "The song allows listeners to embrace vulnerability and ride out any ill-willed thoughts, with the hope of finding compassion for oneself and the other person by the end."

The song comes from The Pinkerton Raid's new album The Highway Moves the World (out now). The record and its songs—which have already been praised at outlets such as The Grateful Web, Under the Radar, American Songwriter, Shindig!, Americana UK, WUNC, Indy Week & more—delve into heady, atmospheric rock and folk, at once encompassing The Pinkerton Raid's distinct sonic personalities. And thematically, Highway explores the complexity of family relationships, with each song inspired by a different member of DeConto's family, imbuing the material with the kind of deep emotion reserved for only the closest of bonds.
 
“My parents raised us five siblings in New Hampshire," DeConto says, "and then I grew up, went to college, got married, had my first kid, spent three or four years back in New Hampshire after school, and moved down to North Carolina, expecting my second kid at the time. Essentially, the album's title track, ‘Highway Moves the World,’ is the story of how we all ended up together again—how my mom followed me and my kids, and how my four siblings all eventually came along, too. It’s a story that serves as a window into all these important family relationships in my life, which is something I get pretty deep into on the new record.”
 
Possibility permeates The Highway Moves the World, which was produced by David Wimbish of fellow North Carolina band The Collection and features 12 songs, each inspired by a different complicated human being, all of whom just so happen to be DeConto’s closest family members—as well as a couple longtime friends with the power to deliver either great joy & wonder or profound betrayal & disappointment. In other words, these characters are familiar stand-ins for the people loved by any of us.
 
DeConto recorded most of The Highway Moves the World on the brink of the pandemic (as January turned to February 2020) with bassist Jonathan DePue, drummer Scott McFarlane and guitarist Garrett Langebartels. Despite their album-release plans being delayed by covid lockdown, in 2020 they put out new single “Dream the Sun,” a paean to the pain of waiting. The song was also a tribute to Jesse’s sister Katie, her tireless work of arts advocacy, and the tattoo on her right shoulder, reminding her that through it all there is a sun—a source of warmth and light—even when all you feel and see is cold and dark.
 
The Highway Moves the World has its roots two decades ago in the DeContos’ leaky basement rehearsal space, where Jesse learned Beatles songs and started to examine his tribe’s own particular brand of woundedness as the 19-year-old eldest brother of five. “Basement Tapes”—a highlight of the new album— is a sparse, melodic remembrance of this time and the musical family’s origins.
 
The new album’s songs travel through forest legends and foreign lands, blackjack games and French bistros, photo albums and feminist awakenings, all serving as the scene-sets and props for human drama of the most genuine kind. By the end of the journey, the listener comes full circle to “Merseybeat,” with its garden parties, echoes of “Eleanor Rigby” and another Liverpool legend—Gerry Marsden of Gerry and the Pacemakers—showing up in the lyrics with a simple message: “Don’t walk alone.” Shindig! magazine called the song “a long-faded sound from a distant time and place … shimmering as if born anew.” Given Jesse’s origins playing The Beatles in that leaky basement, it’s a pretty good summary of the song, the new record and a career now five albums deep.