|
Consumer Guide: A Very Good Year
Want to know why I do this, over and above it's a living? Because as
of August 14 or so I thought it was a lousy year--until the grading
discipline made me come to terms with just how good the new
Sleater-Kinney, Mekons, and Spoon albums are.
THE APPLES IN STEREO: Velocity of Sound (SpinArt) After
years of taking the band name literally, I realized that not even
Magical Mystery Tour was this arch. If Robert Schneider's
falsetto affect evokes the '60s, it's such extreme cases as the
Hollies of "Carrie-Anne" and the Small Faces of "Itchycoo Park," a
narrow frame of reference even as formalism goes. Here it's played for
teen ambience rather than musicianly musing. The gurl cameos help, as
does the antigurl Beach Boys closer, but since the teens it speaks for
are as imaginary as the era it honors, that Schneider (just barely)
brings the conceit off is the usual tribute to his songwriting
chops. If he had anything to say, he could be a contender.
A MINUS
DEXTER'S LABORATORY: THE HIP-HOP EXPERIMENT (Cartoon
Network/Rhino) With sci-fi a linchpin of hip-hop's nerd
underground, a kiddie show gets it right for the ideal length of one
EP. De La Soul are grownups who could have sent up "Sibling
Rivalries" on their own, but both Coolio and a Black Eyed Pea to be
spelled later benefit mightily from what Kool Moe Dee used to call
sticking to themes. Also from cultivating what Kool Moe Dee didn't
know enough to call innocence. A MINUS
MARIANNE FAITHFULL: Kissin Time (Virgin/Hut) She's a
professional sufferer, to be taken seriously as who she is rather than
what she symbolizes. That said, and despite two dull Billy Corgan
copyrights, these collaborations with the likes of Blur and Beck are
her best bunch of songs since--not Broken English, that's
ridiculous, but Strange Weather or A Child's Adventure.
And that said, its peak is a ghost closer from the '60s, Goffin-King's
supremely untortured "I'm Into Something Good"--inspired by Earl
Jean's version, not Herman's Hermits', all feminists devoutly
hope. B PLUS
ICE CUBE: Greatest Hits (Priority) He's always been
intelligent, and talented. What he hasn't always been is honest. So
though I miss "Dead Homiez" and the late anomaly where he plays an
ex-G in a wheelchair, and note that this garbage scow lists alarmingly
when it takes on his 1998 and 2000 albums (both named War and
Peace, after how hard it is to get through them), I'm grateful to
be able to access so many of his best beats and rhymes without once
hearing him incite a race riot or force a Catholic schoolgirl to lick
his testicles. A MINUS
MEKONS: OOOH! (Quarterstick) Their best album in a
decade doesn't exactly come up and give you a kiss. Half 9-11 fallout,
half night thoughts of a band whose heyday is past, it begins with
what seems a faux-folk trope until you realize that "Thee Olde Trip to
Jerusalem" is also the new crusade, and ends with the impassive boast,
"We pride ourselves that our memory/Will vanish from the memory of the
world." It's slow, sour, dark, grim--obsessed with treachery,
conflagration, and death. For years the Time Out of Mind fan
club has been finding unfathomable fatalism in folk songs that rarely
gather the grounded gravity sustained here. Inspirational Verse
(really, think about it): "Everyday is a battle/How we still love the
war." A
ME'SHELL NDEGÉOCELLO: Cookie: The Anthropological Mixtape
(Maverick) Age increased the wisdom she trafficked in while
familiarity cut into the sexual allure that ran the roadblocks. So
here's hoping Madonna Inc. is as ready to forgive Ndegéocello's
limited profitability as she is to not be a materialistic girl. Her
basslines prove that unmaterialistic ain't immaterial, and without
resorting to anything so obvious as a hook she manages to maintain
continuity and interest over an hour-plus of poetry-with-funk. Quiet
storm music for people who don't turn off their brains when they get
down to bidness--at least not right away. A MINUS
PRETTY GIRLS MAKE GRAVES: Good Health (Lookout) "All we
are, all we are, all we are/Is trying not to fall into line," goes
half of one song, and by dint of palpable effort and notable skill,
this grrrlish Seattle neopostpunk quintet succeed--except insofar as
neopostpunk sets a line of its own, of course. For three EPs now
become one 27-minute CD, they thrash out herky-jerk bombardiering,
guitar abrasions that won't go away, and themes, classic themes:
alienation, separation, betrayal, all that negative intensity. The
counterbalance is a golden age they strive to re-create in the present
tense: "And nothing else matters/When I turn it up loud." Probably the
struggle will prove too much in the end. But Fugazi has made a life of
it--a life some pretty girls aspire to. A MINUS
RIZWAN-MUAZZAM QAWWALI: A Better Destiny (RealWorld) You
bet I A-shelved The Rough Guide to Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, Music
Club's Ecstasy even better. Nevertheless, my basic attitude
toward the prolific late great is enough already: We atheists need
only so much Allah, and a little marginal differentiation helps the
Sufism go down. I didn't notice the first two albums by this group,
led by two more of Nusrat's numberless nephews, and I might like the
first, by the label's account "traditional" rather than the "hypnotic
fusion" of the Count Dubulah-aided follow-up. But when I grabbed this
one blind, I had a reconversion experience. Even by qawwali standards
Rizwan and Muazzam have big voices--rival nephew Rahat is
distressingly reedy by comparison. They're at once more forceful and
more eccentric than fraternal competitors the Sabri Brothers. And
they're also lively, leaping higher and crazier than nephew Basrat on
his latest speed-qawwali venture, the imaginatively titled Lost in
Qawwali III. A MINUS
|
SLEATER-KINNEY: One Beat (Kill Rock Stars) Sleater-Kinney is one of three
unapologetically political bands to respond to September 2001's world-change
with August 2002 albums, and it's remarkable how different they are. The
Mekons are cynical and defiant; Springsteen is spiritual and uplifting.
Yet both seem worn out, as if neither defiance nor uplift can get them out
of bed in the morning. Sleater-Kinney, on the other hand, go for
defiant uplift and seem energized by the challenge. Probably it isn't
the stance that energizes them--it's their energy that powers the
stance. Not only are they a generation younger, they're riding the
crest of a wild success burdened by neither the Mekons'
quarter-century of subsistence nor Springsteen's felt responsibility
to 10 million consumers--not to mention that Corin spent 2001 with her
new baby, who plays a suitably small and crucial role in her September
11 song. Throughout they bubble and shriek--literally in the opener,
where Corin's "bubble in a sound wave" is the secret of both social
and nuclear fusion, and in the career guitar line Carrie lays under
"Oh!" Let "Step Aside" do its thing and you'll "shake a tail feather
for peace and love" no matter what your weary self thinks of protest
songs. A
SPOON: Kill the Moonlight (Merge) It's so reassuring
when the indie rumor mill isn't just licking its own asshole. Britt
Daniel and company's Merge-reissued 1998 Elektra cutout A Series of
Sneaks doesn't qualify as the instant pleasure hypesters
claim. It's too spiky and too cryptic. But it certainly earned its
cult, which was onto something much bigger than last year's Girls
Can Tell, the breakthrough album skeptics like me took for a fluke
peak: namely, this one. Eggo Johansen's piano-styled keybs mark the
hooks as Daniel exploits the catch in his voice to establish a humane
mood. There's even a thematic thread. If I was feeling cranky I might
argue that songs about marginality will consign you to the margins
every time. But the two titles that set the course, "Small Stakes"
and "How We Get By," seem pretty universal to me. A
Dud of the Month
DAVID BOWIE: Heathen (ISO/Columbia) The "Bowie's back"
huzzahs that accompany every one of this music mill's new releases beg
the question of what he's back to and from. The reason Englishmen have
actually touted him as the greatest rock artiste of all time is that
he's the least American major rock artiste of all time, which is one
reason his careful brand maintenance isn't filling any arenas over
here. Just to be mean I compared his latest phoenix imitation to
1979's Lodger, a certified nonclassic I always kind of
liked. Lodger won easy. He has indeed Learned to Sing, thus
rendering himself more the chansonnier only art-rockers ever wanted
him to be, and the strain is hell on his sense of humor. The textures
are nicer now, but whose aren't? And while the songwriting ain't bad,
it also ain't that good. Just switch between the Black Francis cover
and any other track and you'll know exactly what I mean. C PLUS
Additional Consumer News
Honorable Mention:
- Sonic Youth, Murray Street (DGC): the
diligently realized sound of exhaustion ("Sympathy for the
Strawberry," "Rain on Tin")
- Rocket From the Tombs, The Day the Earth Met the
Rocket From the Tombs (Smog Veil): David Thomas and Peter
Laughner rehearse and play out, rude and alive respectively ("Raw
Power," "Never Gonna Kill Myself Again")
- Supersuckers, Must've Been Live (Mid-Fi):
alt-rock road dogs unleash country hoo-haw ("Good Livin'," "Hangin'
Out With Me")
- Blackalicious, Blazing Arrow (MCA): Words of
Wisdom from Gift of Gab ("Sky Is Falling," "Release")
- The Queers, Pleasant Screams (Lookout):
paring down from "I Hate Your Fucking Guts," "I Just Called to Say
Fuck You," "Journey to the Center of Your Empty Fucking Skull,"
"Stupid Fucking Vegan," "My Cunt's a Cunt," and "Just Say Cunt" to
"See You Later Fuckface" in just two years! ("I Never Got the Girl,"
"Homo")
- Linda Thompson, Fashionably Late (Rounder):
relocating her folk roots with a male musical-domestic
collaborator--her son Teddy ("Weary Life," "Dear Mary")
- Tony Allen, Psyco on da Bus (Platform):
Africa's premier avant-popster breaks Afrobeat into trip-hop ("Push
Your Mind Break Beat Remix," "Hand Full of Sands")
- Pere Ubu, St Arkansas (SpinArt): there is no
joy in Meadville, mighty Ubu has blooped a single to left center--but
there wasn't much joy before either ("Slow Walking Daddy," "333")
- Reigning Sound, Time Bomb High School (In the
Red): Jack White's garage-blues feel without its poetry ("Time Bomb
High School," "Stormy Weather")
- Arto Lindsay, Invoke (Righteous Babe): never
think samba can't accommodate, and indulge, the abstruse ("Invoke,"
"Ultra Privileged")
- Dave Pirner, Faces and Names (Ultimatum
Music): from a dynamite soul singer, these would be dynamite soul
ballads ("Teach Me to Breathe," "Faces and Names")
- Original Sinners (Nitro): better Exene in band than
Exene with backup, but the X factor was a Y chromosome ("Who's
Laughin' Now," "River City")
- Chumbawamba, Readymades (MCA): faux-slick
truths about real world horror ("All in Vain," "Don't Pass Go")
- Jarvis Church, Shake It Off (RCA): the theory
is, if Minneapolis produced a Prince, so can Toronto ("Who Will Be
Your Man," "Shake It Off")
- Los Lobos, Good Morning Aztlán (Mammoth):
back to basics, all because, no kidding, "things are not the way they
used to be" ("Good Morning Aztlán," "Maria Cristina")
Choice Cuts
- Bruce Springsteen, "Paradise," "Nothing Man," "The Rising,"
"My City of Ruins" (The Rising, Columbia)
- Ol' Dirty Bastard, "Reunited," "Here Comes the Judge"
(The Trials and Tribulations of Russell Jones, D3
Entertainment)
- Toby Keith, "Huckleberry," "Who's Your Daddy?"
(Unleashed, DreamWorks)
[Later: B/E]
- Sleater-Kinney, "Maraca" (Group, Yoyo)
- David Johansen & the Harry Smiths, "My Grandpa Is Old
Too" (Shaker, Chesky)
Duds:
- Beachwood Sparks, Make the Cowboy Robots Cry
(Sub Pop)
- Beachwood Sparks, Once We Were Trees (Sub
Pop)
- Tift Merritt, Bramble Rose (Lost Highway)
- David Thomas and Two Pale Boys, Surf's Up!
(Thirsty Ear)
- V for Vendetta, Beneath This Mask Another
Mask (Mr. Lady)
- Victoria Williams, Sings Some Ol' Songs
(Dualtone)
Village Voice, Sept. 10, 2002
|
July 16, 2002 |
Oct. 22, 2002 |
|
|