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Consumer Guide for April/May 2007
By Robert Christgau Special to MSN Music
Life is change. Having promised 10 to 12 A records per bimonthly Consumer
Guide, I can't resist taking it up to 13 here because, well, mostly because they
were there, including three 2006 CDs by a Norwegian trumpeter of disgracefully
limited U.S. repute. In Honorable Mentionand also, naturally, Duds, I catch up
with the collective wisdom of a critics' poll I used to oversee -- without which
I might never have broken through to that punky little Thermals album.
Arcade Fire "Neon Bible" (Merge)
To remind us that anxiety is in his bones, Win Butler refurbishes the 2003
plaint "No Cars Go" as a football cheer about the safe place just before sleep.
But everywhere else he emerges from his precious privacy and names the things he
has to be afraid of, things he shares with all of us -- religions run amok,
rising tides, the surveillance state, a cowboy-in-chief with so little to lose
he could start World War III on a dare. He doesn't tame his fears by naming
them, or hint that they can be overcome, although in "The Well and the
Lighthouse," he advises the lighthouse: "If you leave, them ships are gonna
wreck." But he and his large band of unarty art-rockers rock so hard and so
beautiful they can propel anyone who listens past the end of the record. They
thud rather than thunder. But what a loud and joyous thud it is.
Grade: A PLUS
Saban Bajramovic "Gypsy Legend" (Times Square)
Because Marshall Tito's Yugoslavia encouraged more recording than madman
Nicolae Ceausescu's Romania, this Serbian icon has a catalogue that awaits
compilation. But just in case his master recordings proved casualties of war, in
1999 some culturally enlightened Dutchmen had him reprise a few hits. Roughened
by 63 years of hard living, Bajramovic's voice has lost glide and thrust here,
but even in his wild youth he was no breast-beater -- his persona was unruly,
his manner suave. Balancing Balkan accordion-violin-clarinet and Gypsy swing is
Bosnia's Mostar Sevdah Reunion band. "Sevdah" is an Arabic word said to mean
"love, desire or ecstasy." Those feelings do get around.
Grade: A MINUS
Beck "The Information" (Interscope)
Because he's also the poster child of '90s irony, which morphed so neatly
into the passivity '00s alt-rockers pit against evil, the poster child of
information overload doesn't quite get down to cases here. But unlike "Guero" this one really has some war in it -- makes "a kick
drum sound like an SOS" and turns a homeless woman into a soldier in Iraq. The
best song addresses a chronic problem clearly for once: "I think I'm in love and
it makes me kind of nervous to say so." "Dark Star" despairs so resolutely it
could make a dead man grateful.
Grade: B PLUS
Golem "Fresh Off Boat" (JDub)
Easy-Klezmer as Gypsy brass. Yet the only wind instrument is a trombone, and
it's quieter than the violin this tradition-bending ensemble puts on clarinet
duty. In Yiddish or English, of which there's just enough, it's the singers who
pump up the party: Eugene Hutz fan Aaron Diskin growling as if he's given up
musical comedy for Purim, the incendiary Annette Ezekiel -- an Ethel Merman for
our time.
Grade: A MINUS
Various Artists "Jewface" (Reboot
Stereophonic)
Though these 16 dialect songs from 1905 to 1922 are generally performed by
Jewish comics, gramophone megastar Billy Murray "goils" and "vys" through his only
known Hebrew number, and jill-of-all-accents, Ada Jones, trills "Under the Matsos Tree." Like Irving Berlin's "Cohen Owes Me 97 Dollars," they're usually
written by Jewish tunesmiths, but to the best of my knowledge neither Bert
Fitzgibbon nor Al Piantadosi qualify. In other words, they're not only
minstrelsy but on occasion blatantly exploitative minstrelsy, just as compiler
Jody Rosen's album title implies. Nevertheless, they're good for many yocks on
the order of "I'm a good Yiddisher/Buttonhole finisher" and often truly sharp,
as in "He was sentimental/Not Jewish, but gentle" (that's a toreador) or "All
Cohens look alike to me" (substitute the pet name of a masked, ring-tailed
carnivore). They're catchy and well-sung -- try Fanny Brice's "Becky Is
Back in the Ballet" or Rhoda Bernard's "Nat'an" -- and orchestrated with
some variety. They're history; they make you think about the compulsion to
racial stereotype in American humor. But mostly they're just a delight --
talent enjoying itself without inhibition. If you disapprove, consult a
proctologist.
Grade: A MINUS
Nils Petter Molvær "An American Compilation" (Thirsty
Ear)
Molvær is a Norwegian trumpeter formerly on ECM who during the past decade
has proven himself a sonic hipster as unflappable as Miles Davis himself. Peter Gordon's electronica-friendly
nu-jazz label, Thirsty Ear, introduces its new prize to his natural audience by
bearing down on Molvær's Europe-only 2002 "NP3" and front-loading the title tune
of ECM's 2001 release "Solid Ether." This overplays Molvær's interest in power funk
and pretty solos, but what the hell -- he's always shifting tactics anyway, and
there's still atmospheric ambience aplenty.
Grade: A MINUS
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