The first time I saw Typhoon, around 2006, they looked like the kids from Lord of the Flies after
a few weeks on the island. Unkempt, new to the big city, exploding with excitement to play for
anyone, anywhere. In basements and back-room all-ages clubs that might as well have been
basements, they already knew how to rattle bones, jerk tears and turn stomachs--that all came
Naturally.
I don’t know how self-aware they were then. I don’t know if they really knew the power of the
sheer spectacle of ten kids flooding a space like an uprising of feral choir students. I know they
didn’t seem too self-assured. During the quiet parts they would sway against each other, some
biting their lips and some staring at their shoes while frontman Kyle Morton strummed a guitar
half his size. Nervous jokes were often cracked amongst the horn section. And then the chorus
would hit and they would intuitively become this single, heart-rending noise that didn’t sound like
anything else. More metal than all but the gnarliest metal; still sweet and unflinchingly honest.
They weren’t kids in those moments, they were pure weaponized humanity.
For a long time I thought the secret ingredient was youth--that the urgency of being 19 and
having something to say just permeated Typhoon’s songs and made them feel vital. They were,
after all, the kids who couldn’t get enough. They were the kids you’d see cross-legged in the
front row of the Mount Eerie show, wide-eyed. But Typhoon has grown up without letting go of
their earnesty or their urgency. The band has gotten smarter, sharper, less reliant on spectacle.
Typhoon has pared down a bit (eight members at last count), though old members still make
appearances onstage and are often strewn about the green room after hometown shows, when
shows aren’t so hard to come by.
As time has gone by, Kyle Morton has slowly become one of his generation’s most profound
and nuanced songwriters. He has also learned how to run a band that once seemed
unmanageable. Typhoon’s secret instrument of hearts and hollers bubbling up in loose unison,
though, that still works just the same way. Maybe it works because this band is still interrogating
the same complicated hallways of the human heart that it started with.
Typhoon songs are, overwhelmingly, about the human tendency to confuse the things that
possess us for the things we possess. They are about the impossibility of home, even as
physical houses feature so prominently in Morton’s songs: dying on the kitchen floor, an idyllic
cabin where small monsters lay in wait, the long hallways of the devil’s mansion (I told you this
band was metal). In ever more ambitious fashion, Typhoon asks why it’s so hard to find our
place, why our lot is never large enough. Honestly, the answer keeps getting darker. Lucky for
us, Typhoon keeps a light on.
In 2018, ahead of the curve as usual, Typhoon released an apocalypse album. The ambitious
double-LP Offerings found Morton writing about senility, the most terrifying thing he could
imagine. It was the darkest and most difficult Typhoon record, if ultimately the most rewarding
for longtime listeners. It was also much bigger than personal narrative: Offerings was as much
about a world and a country forgetting their virtues as it was about our narrator losing his mind.
Now in the midst of an actual apocalypse, Typhoon finds themselves ahead of the times once
more. Sympathetic Magic, first tracked in the basement home studio Morton built while isolating
with his wife and dog, then fleshed-out piecemeal with socially distanced bandmates, is both a
meditation on grief and a road map to healing. It’s inspired by the dark delusion of the Trump
years and the loneliness and uncertainty of the pandemic, yes, but also colored by the hope and
connection Morton felt while marching in massive racial justice protests in his native Portland.
“The songs are about people,” Morton writes. “The space between them and the ordinary,
miraculous things that happen there, as we come into contact, imitate each other, leave our
marks, lose touch. Being self and other somehow amounting to the same thing.”
For those of us keeping count, three houses feature prominently on this record. All of them are
approached with trepidation and all of them contain revelations: A trivial memory with
immeasurable weight; an old friend who needs a lifeline; a piano that begs to be played. It’s not
always clear if these spaces are real or imagined. It’s also not clear if any of the deliverance
found in them will be permanent. It’s on a train ride through the midwest where Morton feels
most bullish. “I’ll find the sacred buried in me,” he promises on “Empire Builder.” “And I will cut it
out while everyone is watching.”
Then, like a sneaker wave rolling quietly back out to sea, he tempers the melodrama. “It will not
be enough.”
That’s how Typhoon walks the fine line between giving up and starting over: Morton has never
promised a happy ending, but on Sympathetic Magic he reminds us that when there’s even a
slight chance of redemption, it’s a chance worth taking. That’s the central gift of a
post-apocalypse record that finds Typhoon stacking gallows humor next to a legitimately aching
love for humanity, and it’s what this band has always done so well: stitched the smallest
personal tragedies, unforgotten and honored, into a universe-sized quilt. I can’t think of a more
useful skill in this relentless moment, where we so often want to forget ourselves--or worse yet,
give up on ourselves--because the world is just too goddamn much.
“Welcome to the Endgame” finishes the record, and a silver lining it is not--more of a fight song
for the spiritually exhausted. But it does end with a promise of solidarity that, for me, is sweeter
than any bullshit happy ending.
“Here we go into the cauldron,” Morton says. “I’ll see you on the other side.”
-Casey Jarman
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