The handsome family scores hbo's 'true detective' with death dirge

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Few placements in music are as coveted as an opening credits slot on an HBO series, especially one as high profile as “True Detective.” The new series stars Matthew McConaughey and Woody


Harrelson as cops trying to solve a series of ritualized murders, so it stands to reason that producers selected the Handsome Family and its song “Far From Any Road.” Birthed in Chicago by


the wife-husband team of Rennie and Brett Sparks, the Family has so many lyrical dead bodies in its past that listing them in a single paragraph adds up to a pretty serious indictment. No


wonder the duo relocated to Albuquerque. Rennie, who writes many of the duo’s songs, has killed fictional swans with stones and snakes with sharpened sticks, has dragged dogs off in floods.


She’s shot a brother five times in the back, carried “poor, poor Lenore” away by crows, imagined Amelia Earhart’s last moments, expired two lovers by double suicide in “Down in the Valley of


Hollow Logs,” drowned a man named Michael in the ocean, killed a beautiful wife with one blade and a cancer victim with another (the latter by her own hand -- with a pen knife). PHOTOS:


CONCERTS BY THE TIMES Sylvia? She fared pretty well in the band’s hands, relatively speaking. The star of the song “Caterpillars” (from the group’s 2013 album “Wilderness”) can be found


dangling “deep within uncharted jungle where giant caterpillars crawl/They spun their silk around her, a cocoon beneath the trees/And still she hangs there swaying, deep within the dripping


leaves.” For its part, “Far From Any Road,” which opens each episode of “True Detective,” features a dead body “hidden in the branches of poison creosote.” A funereal dirge featuring Brett’s


gorgeous baritone, the song offers texture that bleeds into the series itself. Watch the opening sequence below. [embedded content] ALSO: Album review: A fiery ‘Lone Justice’ Christine


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