January 10, 2009

Brokeback - Morse Code In The Modern Age: Across The Americas

(download “Flat Handed and on the Wing”)

Seriously cool, empty post-genre half-improvised music you might hear in a bowling alley where the pins are sheep jumping over a fence.

People from Tortoise, Calexico, the Chicago Underground Duo, and the first recorded incarnation of Cat Power make the sort of music you would expect, except expect less whee and more aahmm.  And those are some pretty aahmmy groups to start with.

In the end, I suspect that this music doesn’t really matter, unless it matters to you.  It’s just too cool.  It’s the ultimate rejection of the Led Zeppelin kind of grab-you-by-the-nostrils rock music.  Punk was like a military coup which overthrows a corrupt government and then tyranizes.  Tortoise and the rest of this ilk are like a Swedish utopian society that just moves along happily.  You never would recognize it as important, but conceptually it’s very fit.

Recorded at two of my favorite studios, Tucson’s Wavelab and Soma in Chicago.

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Tags: improvisation Cat Power tortoise cool wavelab studio punk
December 12, 2008

Cat Power - Moon Pix

I’m going to try to “get serious” about writing.  We’ll see how that goes.

At the moment, I’m trying to convince myself, followed by Continuum International Publishing Group, followed by 5,000 or so lucky customers, that I can write a book about a great album.  Strictly speaking, according to the call for proposals, the album does not have to be great.

The albums I’m considering are:

  • Cat Power - Moon Pix
  • Bjork - Vespertine
  • The Evens - The Evens
  • Smog - Knock Knock
  • OP8 - Slush
  • Robert Wyatt - Rock Bottom
  • Shania Twain - Come On Over
  • The Cure - The Head on the Door
  • Tom Ze, who doesn’t have a “that’s the one” album
  • The Grateful Dead - Live / Dead
  • They Might Be Giants - Lincoln

What else?  There are probably a hundred more.  I feel vaguely competent to approach these albums, unlike, for example, The Talking Heads’ Remain In Light.  None of the bands have yet been covered in the 33 1/3 series, and none are in the list of 50 bands which have been proposed already.  All of these are universal - these are not sounds that precisely fit some crack in my psyche, like the chewed up gum of the Moldy Peaches or Glenn Branca’s hundred year flood.

That last point is important, because the book really does have to induce 5,000 people to drop the price of 10 mp3s for it.  I imagine that about 70% of the choice to purchase rests on the album in question - except in cases like Colin Meloy’s memoirish account of The Replacements’ Let it Be.  The big sellers seem to be books about an album adored by either a small, information-starved audience (eg Neutral Milk Hotel’s fans), or a massive audience, some of which prefers the format of these books to the 30 other books about a given artist (Bob Dylan).

Cat Power’s Moon Pix is a good choice.  It’s a set of eleven pure knockout songs.  The story of Chan Marshall moving to Prosperity, South Carolina and waking up out of nightmares and into half a dozen songs is a classic, even if it’s fairly well known at this point.  The audience is large, and still growing, but information is scarce - only one book about the band turns up on Amazon.com.

Moon Pix is the “that’s the one” Cat Power album.  I don’t necessarily have to say it’s the best, although it is, just that it represents her major turning point of departure. (I think there might be a Robert Wyatt song in that sentence.)  Before it, Cat Power was an OK indie rock band, not the great singer and watched artist that she has been since.

I remember being just hammered by this album when I put it on in my blue Geo Prizm, sitting in a parking lot on the Pacific Coast Highway.  It combines real lyrics, gooey underwater instrument playing, and Chan Marshall singing like she is overcome by the “Black Sleep of Kali Ma”.  What?

On the other hand, the harmonic structures and recording methods are not particularly inspiring on this one.  There are great sounds and great performances, but writers generally approach sounds and singing by pouring syrup over them and brushing off the flies.  “Chan Marshall’s evocative warbling creates a distinct unease in her transfixed auditors, while her greasy guitar-slinging curdles their milkshakes in a manner that can only be termed heavenly.”  My favorite music book is The Beatles as Musicians, by Walter Everett, who is interested in the Beatles as musicians, not just as story-fodder.  Everett approaches the album as a work with an inherent meaning, for which the history and personalities only offer us context.

Feel free to suggest other albums I should write about.

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Tags: 33 1/3 Beatles Cat Power Lyrics Matador Robert Wyatt album driving dylan singing smog writing songwriting
November 28, 2008
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Madeline - The Slow Bang (hear “To Hell And Back”)

It’s friendly music.  You can sit with it for a while, trading inconsequential stories or a few ideas you’ve been mulling over, always with the undercurrent of long-term meaning.

Madeline is a not-the-same-as-her-speaking-voice singer.  You can hear her talking for a few seconds somewhere in the album.  She sounds totally normal, and then starts singing like someone else entirely.  It’s not a result of intense feeling, but rather a removal from that feeling.  Someone like Chan Marshall will become a huge agitated seagull while singing, but it’s not at bottom removed from her standard means of expression.

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Tags: singing friendly Cat Power
October 8, 2008

Cat Power w/ Golden Boots - 7 Oct 08, Tempe AZ

Golden Boots is a Tucson band which is pretty great, one of those bands where one person writes straight Beatles-y songs and the other writes things that are fairly out there.  These kinds of bands always have the risk of splintering, when the pop songster wants to sell out and the weirdo clings to artistic integrity.  As a band they succeed precisely in combination, and it’s imperative that they maintain respect for each other’s work.  Sometimes the pop songs are just too good, or the freakonomics are too complex, and it’s like a centrifugal force whipping them apart - nothing can hold that together for long, and you know when that time comes.  I suspect these guys are not heading to that point.  They belong together; certainly now they succeed in combination beyond what they would apart.

My wife talked about juxtaposition - making a scene, in effect, where there is otherwise no content.  By placing a cup next to a flashlight, for example, and photographing it, you make people contemplate each in the other’s frame of reference.  The content is in the juxtaposition.  I think it’s unfair to say that Golden Boots is only relying on juxtaposition, but it did help them to get my attention.

Cat Power, on the other hand, we agreed had no juxtaposition.  Every song was in roughly the same tenor with roughly the same approach.  Every song succeeded in itself, from its own integral virtues, rather than by surprising.

Here’s the thing.  Chan Marshall originally appealed to me as a writer.  The songs on Moon Pix are extraordinary.  Her singing is great, of course, but the songs are the real draw.  I see now that she is not actually a writer, but a performer.

A writer has to feel something and simultaneously think something - to remain separate from while engaged in the subject.  The so-called stream-of-consciousness writings of Jack Kerouac are fun to know about but terribly boring to read.  Performers, on the other hand, precisely can not be objective. They can’t be embarassed about what they were feeling at the time they wrote the song.  A singer can’t think about whether the vocal is loud enough in the monitors or whether she is playing the guitar well.  She has to purely express core humanity.

If Marshall is a performer, why is Moon Pix so great?  Maybe because the songs were specifically written from a performance mindset.  As the legend goes, she woke up from a nightmare and wrote most of the album in one stream of frightened consciousness.

So what does that mean for a Cat Power show?  It means that when she sticks to expressing what she feels, she succeeds, and that’s precisely what she is doing now.  She’s deep in it, soul singing, climbing out of the murk, to the extent that every song she performed was in the same vein.  Even her own songs, like “I Don’t Blame You” and “Metal Heart”, are reworked into dark gospel numbers.  She’s Mick Jagger in jail, she’s Nina Simone without the glee.

By the way, is it just Chan Marshall and Bill Callahan, or is there a general trend of 90’s indie bands going gospel/soul?  I guess Iron & Wine came out with a 70’s rock album, so maybe the trend is generally towards our old friend authenticity.

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Tags: 90's Cat Power Golden Boots indie juxtaposition performing singing soul writing Nina Simone
October 1, 2008

TV on the Radio - Dear Science

It’s a good album.  A little safe.  I mean, TV on the Radio should be coming out with something that just kills about now.  Like an OK Computer type of album, that would be great.  This should be their Joshua Tree, but instead it’s more like Cat Power’s the Greatest - where’s the knockout blow?  Of course, people love the Greatest, and I would imagine that this album is satisfying people too, but after another of this sort of album TVOTR is going to have to pull a Nebraska if they want to stay awesome.

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Tags: TV on the Radio Bruce Springsteen The Mansion on the Hill U2 Cat Power safe
January 9, 2008
[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

Smog - Knock Knock (copied from original Daily Listen)

This is one of my favorite albums, so I’m only going to say one thing about it: this album has almost no information beyond lyrics listed in the booklet, or printed on the CD tray - even online there’s very little. That’s awesome. I really think it is part of why the album works so well.

When I first got this, it was because I was a huge Cat Power - Moon Pix fan. I guess I had heard that Cat Power’s Chan Marshall and Bill Callahan of Smog had been on friendly terms, and so I bought it without further thought. The music didn’t impress me at first - if I had known it was a Jim O’Rourke production, I would have paid a lot of attention, and heard all the awesome detail that puts this album next to Neutral Milk Hotel’s In the Airplane Over the Sea, OP8’s album (Calexico, Howe Gelb and Lisa Germano together at Wavelab studio in Tucson in 1997), and the Beatles’ Revolver. As it is, however, ignorant as a mucus-mite, when I finally began hearing the music I heard something much more incredible than the buried background vocals you can hear in the sample above. I heard the songs, one day with my wife, after she discovered Knock Knock in my collection of CDs which I knew were great but hadn’t discovered yet.

That was a good year.

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Tags: Beatles Cat Power Jim O'Rourke Liner Notes micro-detail neutral milk hotel op8 smog wavelab studio