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Proud to hear that this once-troubled fellow Abilenian was making a name for himself on the indie-rock circuit (his debut full-length, Micah P. Hinson and the Gospel of Progress, came out Tuesday), I called Hinson to play a little catch-up.
I had been absent from his life during the dark times. I would gasp at the rumors and the complaints his closer friends voiced to me, I'd make a note to watch out for him, and then I'd eventually forget about him all over again. "It's probably good you didn't know me then," he says over the phone as his tour van leaves Indianapolis for Chicago. He told me how he escaped his residency as prodigal son to the church-infested community we were raised in, how he finally began realizing his musical ambitions and, finally, how he got his parents to start talking to him again.
It all started with a little help from his friends. Another ambitious Abilene kid, John Mark Lapham (son of the local movie critic whose opinions we loved to hate), had been moving back and forth between Texas and Manchester, England, where he was DJing and building up a trans-Atlantic band called the Earlies, which now has a deal with 679 Recordings (the Futureheads, the Streets).
Unlike most other hometowners, myself included, Lapham took Hinson seriously -- so much so that he began aggressively pitching Hinson's demos to English labels alongside his own work. Two and a half years after Lapham took up his cause, Hinson was shacked up in Austin with his girlfriend, figuring his career had pretty much stalled out. Then, very early one morning, Lapham called to tell him that he'd gotten Hinson a deal.
"I was like, 'Holy shit! I'm going back to bed.' And I went back to bed," Hinson says. Later that day, Hinson was the newest client of Sketchbook Records, which offered to fly him to England, buy him studio time and settle the $600 he owed in unpaid traffic tickets that would have precluded his getting a passport. Hinson jumped at the offer, and after the voyage and a 12-hour welcoming interrogation by British customs officials, Hinson was set free with 160 American dollars and a pass to stay in the Queen's garden for one month.
Lapham and Hinson recorded The Gospel of Progress in ten days, with different members of the semi-orchestral Earlies coming in each day to lend instrumental flourishes to the album, building a dramatic but economical backdrop to Hinson's psyche-denuding tales of misery and hope. Hinson toured England for two weeks with the Earlies, then traveled around the UK and Amsterdam in support of Iron & Wine, with which he'll roll across America in a bus shared with Calexico this fall. Also, Hinson and Lapham have recorded an EP that has been picked up by the prestigious label 4AD for a May release in England.
All of this is great, but Hinson knows that if it weren't for Lapham's undying support, he'd probably still be at home, gazing despondently at the brown grass of vacant lots littered with church bulletins and sun-bleached beer cans.
"He [Lapham] really, really saved my life," Hinson says. "Before the record came out, and before all this, I never really had a fire under my ass. I wanted to accomplish things, but I never wanted to put in the time for it."
Nonetheless, Hinson has never had trouble putting in time at the guitar and the tape recorder. He's built up an archive of songs, some of which he plans to release on future albums. Almost all of them were written when his life was falling apart.