This song takes its name from Mexican-American writer Luis Alberto Urrea's 1993 book Across the wire: life and hard times on the Mexican border. Inspired by Urrea's borderland prose, "Across The Wire" throws a sonic spotlight on the US-Mexico divide. Fueled by the vibrant pulse of street fiestas, the song paints a canvas of sunbaked desolation - a stark reminder of the chasm between privilege and desperation where some have everything without empathy and others risk their worlds for a glimpse of a new dawn across the sand-drawn line.
Frontman and lyricist Joey Burns penned "Across The Wire" alongside his longtime collaborator, drummer John Convertino, and their Tucson-based friend and producer, Craig Schumacher. They brought the song to life at Wavelab Studio in the heart of Tucson, Arizona.
"Across The Wire" is a track from Calexico's fourth album, Feast of Wire. The band took inspiration for the title from brutalist writer Harry Crews' 1976 novel A Feast Of Snakes, about the violent events surrounding the Rattlesnake Roundup held annually in Mystic, Georgia. In a 2003 interview, Joey Burns stated that it connected to "this reptilian state of mind that one at times can feel... living in Tucson, Arizona or the Sonora desert" as well as the challenges and technologies of a changing world. "The wire could be anything - from a cell phone line to a guitar cable to a barbed wire."
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