The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Drag queen Trixie Mattel offers folksy wisdom on new album

- BY KRISTIN M. HALL

If you’ve only heard of Trixie Mattel as the blonde, bee-hive wearing winner of “RuPaul’s Drag Race All Stars 3,” then you’ve only scratched the surface of this comedian, television show host and musician.

Mattel’s look is something like an Andy Warhol version of Barbie with giant butterfly lashes and knife sharp cheekbones. Mattel has appeared on multiple seasons of the popular RuPaul series and is the cohost of a Viceland series called “The Trixie & Katya Show.” And behind the biting wit and sarcasm, Mattel is disarming audiences on tour with really earnest country and folk songs about failed relationsh­ips and old-timey wisdom.

Mattel has released two albums, 2017’s “Two Birds,” and this year’s “One Stone,” which fits into the star’s comedy set on the road. Mattel is the stage name of Brian Firkus, who was taught to play Roy Orbison and George Jones songs by his grandfathe­r.

“My grandpa always used to say that being a musician was 40 per cent how good you were and 60 per cent how good you looked doing it,” Firkus said. “And I guess as a drag queen performer that 60 per cent of how good I look really does matter to me.”

Early on, he was not a fan of country music. He found it simple and boring. But as Firkus got older, he found a lot more emotional complexity in the music.

“It’s storytelli­ng. For me, its fables and parables about how things can go wrong in life,” Firkus said. “One of my alltime favourite songs, ‘Ring of Fire,’ compares being in love to the feeling of being on fire. That’s not something you forget about.”

The towering Mattel will tell jokes about relationsh­ips and breaking up, then pick up an autoharp and sing a sad song to punctuate the set. The two albums are sonically a little different, with the first being more country and the second more folk. But the lyrics are peppered with references to other classic country songs.

Firkus was initially unsure how the songs would play in the set, especially since they tended to sound sad.

“The more I put my real life perspectiv­e in my work the more the audience loves it,” Firkus said. “There’s something effective about watching someone who looks really produced be real. It’s like a crying clown face. It has that effect on people.”

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? In this March 23, 2018 photo, Brian Firkus, better known as Trixie Mattel, winner of “RuPaul’s Drag Race All Stars 3,” poses for a portrait in New York to promote her self-released country albums, “Two Birds,” and “One Stone.
AP PHOTO In this March 23, 2018 photo, Brian Firkus, better known as Trixie Mattel, winner of “RuPaul’s Drag Race All Stars 3,” poses for a portrait in New York to promote her self-released country albums, “Two Birds,” and “One Stone.

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