Into the blue Sky Blue Sky

I’ve got to say that, so far, this Pop Matters review of Wilco’s new disc, Sky Blue Sky, gets it. (I used to write for Pop Matters, but have not in about a year.)

The new disc, which I purchased from iTunes last night (I plan to buy an actual CD copy at some point, but wanted more than the stream available on the band’s Web site for now), doesn’t break any new ground — perhaps a rarity for this iconoclastic band — and is one of its most unified collections the band has released to date.

It has been compared to Neil Young’s Harvest — which seems apt, though not because the disc sounds anything like Young’s masterpiece. Harvest was more of a folk record than this is — Sky Blue Sky is in many ways a traditional middle-of-the-road rock record, but infused with a sense of lyrical dissolution, the disintegration of a relationship giving way to some level of hope.

Where the Harvest analogy holds water, however, is in its sudden departure from earlier sounds. Harvest was the quiet Neil Young record, coming on the heels of bigger, more explosive records — and captured a need among the rock listening audience for this kind of sound.

Sky Blue Sky fits this mold — though, I am doubtful that it will strike the same kind of cultural nerve. And that is OK. The band makes great records and puts on an explosive live show (I’ve got tickets for the June 22 show in Red Bank) that has a loyal fan base coming back for more and more.

But back to the record at hand. Sky Blue Sky is the band’s breather record — a step away from the angular guitar lines (though not too far) and experiments with feedback and noise that characterized their most recent efforts.

But perhaps that’s too simple — and doesn’t give this gem of a disc enough credit.

The resignation and acceptance of the opening cut, “Either Way” (“I will understand / everything has its plan /either way”), repeats itself through out, trying on different guises, sometimes in the same song (the apologetic whisper that opens “You are My Face” is cut through with a surprisingly twisting guitar line before settling back into its contemplative mode; “Impossible Germany” letting its musical explorations carry the song, keyboard giving way to guitar and then second guitar with Jeff Tweedy’s restrained vocal almost acting as supporting instrument, hanging there but never getting in the way).

Eric R. Danton, writing in the Hartford Courant, sums up the record this way:

It’s a gentler record, split between breezy ’70s-style pop arrangements and folksy songs that are relaxed and sometimes even playful. Tweedy’s lyrics are … well, “happy” isn’t quite right. But he sounds far less anguished, and there’s an undercurrent of philosophical acceptance to much of his wordplay, as if he’s content for perhaps the first time in his career to simply let things be.

The music, though, is more complex than the ’70s sounds it implies, occasionally rising above itself as it does in “Side with the Seeds,” with Pat Sansone’s keyboard driving the first half and Nels Cline’s subdued frenzy of a guitar lead taking the song home (yes, subdued frenzy may seem like an oxymoron, but there is no other way to explain it).

“Shake It Off” shifts in shape and sound, at times jaunty, at times contemplative, while “Please Be Patient with Me” offers a brief look into brittleness and the R’nB-influenced “Hate It Here” explores the pain of being left behind and the way that loneliness infects even the most mundane of daily occurences.

The disc’s emotional core — and its best song — is the single “What Light,” a fresh piece of folkish rock that I’ve been listening to for several weeks (sometimes when I’m running I hear it and then replay it).

It is hopeful and independent and true, and its placement near the disc’s end allows it to act as commentary on all that has come before: “If you feel like singing a song / And you want other people to sing along / Just sing what you feel / Don’t let anyone say it’s wrong.”

I wouldn’t call Sky Blue Sky the band’s finest disc — but then, I wouldn’t make that claim about any of the previous five studio albums, each offering its charms and challenges. Sky Blue Sky does the same, expanding on an impressive body of work.

I can’t wait until June 22.

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CD spree — featuring Bruce Springsteen

My musical choices are spelled out for the next few months. Fountains of Wayne have a new disc out — today in fact — and Wilco’s new disc is due in May. And there is a new Arctic Monkeys‘ single available for download as of Sunday.

And then there is this, from Bruce Springsteen:

Columbia Records will release ‘Bruce Springsteen With The Sessions Band Live in Dublin’ June 5, a concert DVD, and separate two-CD set release. The two-CD set and DVD both feature 23 songs drawn from the band’s performances in Dublin, Ireland at The Point on November 17, 18 and 19, 2006. Songs include fan favorites from ‘The Seeger Sessions,’ radical interpretations from the Springsteen songbook and rare songs appearing for the first time on any Springsteen release.

Springsteen’s longtime manager Jon Landau said, “‘Live in Dublin’ charts the development of a band from an informal gathering in Bruce’s living room to an onstage powerhouse. It also documents the growth in Bruce’s vision of American music; it includes folk music, blues, Dixieland, country, swing, gospel, rock, down to and including his own writing. It’s all performed with Bruce’s classic energy and focus. I think it’s some of the finest music he’s ever made.”

The DVD and CD captures the band during the finale of its multi-leg 2006 tour. The Word Magazine (UK) said of a concert on this tour, “I have never, make that NEVER, seen a show better than the one mounted by Bruce Springsteen and his band at Wembley Arena on Saturday, November 11, 2006.” The Sunday Business Post Agenda (UK), in a 5 star review, said, “During the concert’s numerous high points, the crowd was ecstatic and Springsteen was the preacher, spreading a welcome message: We’re open all night.”

Bruce Springsteen with The Sessions Band’s tour last year prompted other incredible reviews. “Sometime, somewhere, a more dramatic and exhilarating confluence of music with moment may have existed… But in nearly 40 years of concert-going, I haven’t witnessed one,” said LA Times. The Washington Post declared, “It was the best live show I’ve seen in at least five years. (And I’ve seen a few.)” Meanwhile, The Independent (UK), said, “It’s been an astonishingly rich evening.” The Observer (UK) proclaimed, “Springsteen and the Seeger Session band were an inspiring triumph.”

‘Bruce Springsteen With The Sessions Band Live in Dublin’ was produced by George Travis and produced and edited by Emmy Award winner Thom Zimny, who recently took home a Grammy Award for directing “Wings For Wheels: The Making Of Born To Run,” a DVD in the acclaimed ‘Born To Run’ box set. Legendary mixer Bob Clearmountain mixed the DVD in both stereo and 5.1 surround sound. Bob Ludwig mastered the DVD and CD at Gateway Studios. Documented with nine cameras, the concert was filmed in High Definition (HD).

Make room on the CD racks.

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Music from over the transom

I never know what is going to show up on my desk, especially when it comes to compact discs. We don’t get a lot around here, and most are pretty awful. But sometimes, a real gem will make its way over via one of the smaller independent labels trudging along the edges of the music industry.

That’s how I learned about Brett Dennen‘s disc, So Much More, and The Hacienda Brothers.

And it’s how I came across the quirky, humorous country-rock hybrid, Antsy McClain and the Trailer Park Troubadours — yes, you heard me, Antsy McClain and the Trailer Park Troubadours and their wonderful new disc, Trailercana.

The disc is a crazy affair, musically flawless, weaving bits of country, roots rock, folk, Texas swing — a real American band, varying tempos, spinning to the edge of control, but never losing it.

And then there are the lyrics, songs about drinking and love, but spun through a comic lens. Consider these song titles:

  • “Living in Aluminum”
  • “I Was Just Flipped Off by a Silver Haired Old Lady With a ‘Honk If You Love Jesus’ Sticker on the Bumper of Her Car”
  • “I Wanna Live in a Billboard”
  • “Cubic Zirconium in the Rough”
  • “I Married Up”
  • “Ron Howard’s Brother”

Crazy stuff, right? And the songs are exactly what you’d expect. Here is a snippet of lyric from Billboard”:

I wanna live in a billboard.
I wanna be in that happy place.
I wanna live in a billboard.
I’d be a cowboy with a leather face.
And I’ll never have the need for Prozac.
And the hair I’ve lost will up and grow back.
And I’ll be forever young.

Or this, from “Ron Howard’s Brother”:

And people would ask me questions;
How is Andy Griffith in real life?
Is it true what they say about Gomer?
Did you really meet Barney Fife?

I could go on, but won’t. All I’ll say is that the disc officially comes out May 22. The black sticker on the front of the disc may say “Contains no hits whatsoever,” but that doesn’t mean they shouldn’t get their turn on the VH1 “V-Spot Top 20.”

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Another dumb music list

Eric Alterman mentions this list on his Altercation blog. My question is what kind of criteria might they have come up with that would place Carole King’s very good Tapestry album above Bob Dylan’s Highway 61 Revisited (for that matter, that could place anything above that album aside from maybe Revolver, Rubber Soul or Bringin’ It All Back Home).

And this doesn’t take into account the inexplicable placement of Born to Run at number 14 or the exclusion of any hip hop (Eminem comes in at 28? What about Public Enemy or Run DMC?) from the Top 20 or the ranking of Shania Twain as the “most influencial and popular” country album on the list (what would Johnny, June, Merle, Willie, Waylon, Loretta, Tammy, etc. have to say?).

I guess the key to understanding it is that it “was developed by NARM, the National Association of Recording Merchandisers” — i.e., the people who view music in terms of units and not art.

Alterman offers this comment, with which I won’t argue (though I do abhor violence):

The less said about it, the better. (In a just country, these people would be taken out and shot …)

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