Should we be worried about Jeremy Messersmith?
One had to wonder last week, when Minneapolis' favorite new singer/songwriter of the past half-decade spent a sunny morning showing off one of his favorite new places to take a walk: a graveyard.
Messersmith lives close to the absolute non-action at the Minneapolis Pioneers and Soldiers Memorial Cemetery, a 157-year-old grassy oasis on the bustling corner of Lake Street and Cedar Avenue S. that is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Its residents include War of 1812 vets and prominent settlers and at least one character on Messersmith's latest and most deceptively poppy album, "The Reluctant Graveyard."
A muse of sorts for the new record, the cemetery is driven past daily by thousands of Minneapolis residents who pay it no mind. But Messersmith, 30, is not like most Minneapolis residents.
"You have to see this one over here," he said, excitedly approaching a tombstone that was itself entombed by a massive tree stump (the tree had grown around it). With the morbid tone of a metal musician, he concluded, "Makes you wonder what the tree-root systems are doing to the people under here."
That thought aside, all the cryptic thinking around Messersmith's new album has a simple explanation.
"It's the nearest green space to where I live," he said.
"It's like a park that nobody ever goes to, a good place to clear your head. I'd walk through here and work on a melody, or if I needed to break out of a creative rut."