Stevie Wonder – Innervisions

Innervisions

Stevie WonderInnervisions Tamla T 326V1 (1973)


Stevie’s best album?  Probably.  What Stevie Wonder brought to music in the early-to-mid-Seventies was pretty amazing.  He carried forward the sweet vocals of Motown, or course, but he also added in the rough edges of Detroit rock with just a hint of psychedelia.  This was after all the city of Funkadelic, MC5, Alice Cooper.  He also could make the beats heavier and funkier, thanks to his innovative programmed Moog bass.  But he did all that while also managing to pass for a “singer-songwriter”, as was still a popular movement at the time.  To that end he could put forth brilliantly astute and biting social commentary like “Living for the City” and have it be totally convincing.  Yes, he could do that and still drop in a few ballads.  Bringing it all together, it didn’t quite sound like the sum of its parts.  It was something a little different and better than that.

Taylor Swift – 1989

1989

Taylor Swift1989 Big Machine Records BMRBD0500A (2014)


A political theorist famously declared the “end of history” in the year the Berlin Wall fell.  Even decades on that argument has marked out a very particular debate.  Is the political left dead and finally defeated?  Anyway, what the hell does this have to do with a pop music album by Taylor Swift?  Well, Swift, once associated with pop country music, has made an album firmly committed to revitalizing synthesizer-driven pop, and has named it 1989, the very year that the Berlin Wall fell and when history supposedly ended.  It is also an album set up to carefully avoid confronting moral issues.

1989, the album, is a weird proof that history isn’t over.  The entire album is very good pop music.  Let’s be perfectly clear.  This is excellently crafted work, demonstrating vast command of pop music history in the songwriting and delivering impeccable performances.  This is a smash hit album, and deservedly so.  But let us look beneath that, because it is also an album that essentially tries to re-argue that history has ended.  Since the 2007-08 financial crash, which became a pretext for “austerity” policies that divert wealth from the poor and middle classes to the extremely wealthy, and financial speculation as a diversion from the “real” economy has reached unprecedented heights.  Stephen Thomas Erlewine wrote that the album’s opener, “Welcome to New York,” is “an anthem for carpetbaggers reaping the spoils of rampant gentrification . . . .”  He characterizes the entire album as “a sparkling soundtrack to an aspirational lifestyle.”  1989 was still part of what was called the “me generation” after all. By re-producing the simple pleasures of 1980s synth pop, and only offering any emotional attachments of the lyrics as something extra beyond that, this kind of posits that pop music did peak around 1989, and everything since then just spins in circles at the cul-de-sac that is the end of (musical) history.

Really, the sustaining fantasy behind 1989 comes from deeply reactionary politics.  Most of the songs speak to the idea that a person can freely drop in to the competitive milieu of the “big city” (from, presumably, “flyover country”), grab some success there, in the form of more fun and “happiness”, then check out.  There is a pervasive sentiment that a person can somehow avoid any real risk of such competitiveness, that you always have the possibility to drop out of the city life and secure your place where you were to begin with.  It is the idea that you can get all the benefits of this, and the problems one faces, well, they aren’t major problems and can easily be shrugged off by resuming your place where you started.  In other words, there is no risk of abject failure by sinking lower than where you started, and the people who succeed never do so at anyone else’s expense.  All of this suggests that people have more meaningful freedom than they do in the real world, and it completely trivializes the risks and social costs presupposed by the structural frame of reference that this relies upon.  After all, the songs here that gravitate toward the notion of “more bling and better hedonism” assume there is a kind of social treadmill that a person can just hop on, as if that treadmill goes only in one direction, it was always there and always will be, it is available to anyone who chooses to step onto it, and it is never already occupied by someone else.

The self-obsessed, hyper-individualistic attitude of Swift’s album is a rather arrogant testament to accepting change only to the extent it preserves and recreates the basic system upon which it relies, and then only to advance the protagonist’s position within that established frame.  This is a Hobbesian world in which life is nasty, brutish and short, but in the meantime people can at least grab some cash and related accoutrements.  The people at the top of this grim battleground are, of course, better than those who sink to the bottom — so we are to assume.

Think this is too pessimistic a view of Swift?  Well, she did write an op-ed in the conservative newspaper Wall Street Journal.  It is laced with all the usual reactionary tropes about the rarity of the good, the prevalence meritocracy, inferences that privatization is necessarily the best social order, suggestions that we should not accept envy as an inevitable consequence of inequality but as something dangerously deviant, cynically commenting that there are no path-dependencies that might hinder a nearly absolute personal choice to succeed or not, and, of course, no recognition of the institutional structures that reinforce the uneven playing field and tilt it in favor of some but not others.  The fact that Swift promoted her album with a Wall Street Journal piece is strong evidence of where her sympathies lie, and more generally, that there is an element of class warfare subsumed in it.  Swift merely aligns herself with the overlords, like a collaborationist.

So, this album is not so bad, but what it does is celebrate the worst things about the Western world: the long con that a brutally unequal world is inevitable, so we shouldn’t even notice the foundations of a system constructed to be unfair.  Why did I say this was a well-crafted album deserving of success?  Because it is as pure an expression of the banality of evil as you might find today.

Philip Cohran and the Artistic Heritage Ensemble – The Malcolm X Memorial

The Malcolm X Memorial (A Tribute in Music)

Philip Cohran and The Artistic Heritage EnsembleThe Malcolm X Memorial (A Tribute in Music) Zulu (1970)


A truly remarkable album.  While not so recognizably distinctive as the Artistic Heritage Ensemble’s debut album On the Beach, The Malcolm X Memorial is just as fine an achievement.  This is a deep and effective meditation on the life of one of the most significant public figures of the 20th Century.  Phil Cohran‘s songwriting reaches a high water mark in setting out the four distinct phases of Malcolm X’s life, each of which is featured with its own song named after the appellation Malcolm used in that phase.  Rather than push Malcolm X’s agenda, or try to comment on his significance — socially, politically, or otherwise — Cohran simply creates a rich backdrop that portrays the context for Malcolm’s life.  Listeners can draw their own conclusions about what the man’s life meant, but in hearing this work they unmistakably witness a transformation from familiar and humble beginnings as portrayed by the spooky blues solo from guitarist Pete Cosey that opens the set, to the confrontational tone set by the increasingly busier and driving group arrangements in the middle of the album, to the expansive possibilities suggested by the decidedly non-Western flavor of the finale.  Recorded live, The Malcolm X Memorial features many wonderful performances that could hardly have been improved in a studio.  For instance, just listen to Aaron Dodd‘s lovely tuba solo on “Malcolm Little”, and the funky electric bass on “Detroit Red.”  This is a piece of music well worth attention, and one that rewards careful and repeated listening.  The Artistic Heritage Ensemble belonged to the upper echelon of performers of their time, and, albeit posthumously, they deserve wider recognition.

Wadada Leo Smith – Ten Freedom Summers

Ten Freedom Summers

Wadada Leo SmithTen Freedom Summers Cuneiform RUNE 350/351/352/353 (2012)


Supposedly decades in the making, this massive four-disc collection of music by trumpeter Wadada Leo Smith chronicles the freedom movement (a/k/a civil rights movement) in the United States for the years 1954-64.  It features quartet and quintet jazz combos as well as a chamber orchestra.  On the plus side, this work is nothing if not eclectic.  When it opens with “Dred Scott, 1857,” it has the unmistakably measured, conversational style of Bill Dixon.  A little further in, “Thurgood Marshall and Brown vs. Board of Education: A Dream of Equal Education, 1954” is punchier, more blues-inflected.  By the time the fourth disc rolls around, it settles into a very “typical” spare, rattling-drum modern jazz style.  Unfortunately, there is something rather lacking in this work.  It’s that this takes itself so serious that there isn’t any energy left to let it breathe.  Nothing here innovates, really, and the music isn’t particularly evocative either.  Compared to, say, Philip Cohran and the Artistic Heritage Ensemble‘s The Malcolm X Memorial (A Tribute in Music), this feels a little pedantic and dull.  It’s not bad.  No, it’s actually performed as well as it could be.  But it’s ambitions are unfocused and too shallow.  I think, much like Matana Roberts (though Smith is a substantially more talented performer), this album practices a kind of intellectual bullying.  It takes on a subject for which there is a “correct” view, and adopting that view, there is an effort to silence dissent about the execution and specific content of the compositions and performances purely on the basis of the thematic focus.  So, even if you agree with the notion of equality (which I do), it is still possible to find this music, heard as a discourse about it, unpersuasive and uninteresting.

The Cure – Kiss Me Kiss Me Kiss Me

Kiss Me Kiss Me Kiss Me

The CureKiss Me Kiss Me Kiss Me Fiction FIXH13 (1987)


Like most double albums, this one is too long.  There also is a bizarre eclecticism at play that just doesn’t quite work.  “Just Like Heaven” is classic Cure, with a little bit of punk bite but still very catchy (even if Dinosaur Jr.‘s cover version is better).  As for the rest, well, it’s just all over the map.  At times there is the percussion-laden sound of Public Image Ltd.‘s The Flowers of Romance, plenty of middle-eastern influences, a little lukewarm funk-rock, and even some inklings of the jazz odyssey of Wish — though it’s hard not to think that we are witnesses of the new birth of Spın̈al Tap, mark II.  The Cure try many things here but do few of them well.  This could be worse, and there are some decent songs.  It’s still a disappointment though.

PiL – Metal Box

Metal Box

PiLMetal Box Virgin METAL 1 (1979)


So much of the most innovative music of the 70s came together on Metal Box (originally three metal discs packaged in a film container, the later U.S. version titled Second Edition had a less expensive package). Public Image Ltd. (PiL) kept the immediacy, power, and attitude of punk while creating a special new blend of “pop” music.

The Sex Pistols had booted John Lydon (a/k/a Johnny Rotten) forcing him to find something new. What he found was guitarist Keith Levene and the perfect forum to rant.

Metal Box, the group’s second album, uses only extremes. Pounding bass and icy guitar hiss over the top grind like machinery. Lydon’s paranoid shouting plows through, questioning everything. He rips out the sounds in his head for the world to hear. PiL released singles from the album, but even those great songs seem out of place by themselves. The flow and endless vamps need to slowly overtake you as you listen.

Keith Levene is the sound of PiL. He plays phenomenally inventive solos, as on “Chant” where his scathing guitar laces over muffled repetitions of “love/war/kill/hate.” He comes close to sounding like James “Blood” Ulmer most of the time, improvising in a way that values random effects and eliminates the possibility of mistake. Jah Wobble on bass is also an absolute necessity for this music to work, adding the only melodies. The spontaneous energy keeps the experiments within arm’s reach. The drummer du jour adds little but manages not to spoil the album either.

Dance music, the likes of dub and disco, was the common denominator for PiL. While it seems each performer is doing something completely different, the record pulls it all together with the open space and sweeping textures of CAN’s krautrock. There really are no low points on the entire album. PiL’s debut had connections to the past, but this album (their second) was a step through a gateway. Superficially, Metal Box was absorbed into pop music, though few of the influenced masses think to tracing their roots through PiL.

Great music is tied so much to the social fabric of its time, so that great music tends to come in waves. Metal Box is one of the most brilliant works from an incredible period that birthed the 80s. Even among stiff competition, it stands out as inspired, cohesive, and enduring.

John Cale once said that rock and roll is about screaming and getting paid for it. PiL pulls off that tenuous circus balancing act in profound fashion. My mom once commented while I was listening to Metal Box that it sounded like someone screaming and trying to get paid for it. I don’t think she realized how right she was! This is an album for people who love rock and roll down to their souls, and no one else.

Archie Shepp – For Losers

For Losers

Archie SheppFor Losers Impulse! AS-9188 (1970)


You could look at this album as the greatest waste of talent on vinyl.  You’ve got some of the greatest jazz performers around playing…straight soul charts.  Yet, it works.  Shepp was the brash youngster of the 1960s jazz avant-garde.  He was, typically, a step behind the leading lights, and rarely seemed to deliver on what his talent promised, but, he was only one step behind, and he still delivered something, all of which does count.  Tellingly, the first session for For Losers was just a few days after Albert Ayler‘s New Grass, with the same producer (Bob Thiele).  Additional material from these sessions was later released on the forgettable outtakes collection Kwanza.  In the rapprochement between jazz and rock, Shepp’s style may have ended up being one not pursued by others, usually dismissed as being too deferential to rock/soul structures, but it still holds up on its own terms decades later.

Bob Dylan – Shadows in the Night

Shadows of the Night

Bob DylanShadows in the Night Columbia 88875057962 (2015)


Rock, country, etc. musicians making albums of traditional American pop “standards” are just something that needs to be accepted as some kind of sad inevitability.  They sell like hotcakes.  If you set aside the category of singers like Scott Walker, who seemed fit for traditional pop from the outset, there is a long history of “crossover” attempts in this direction.  Just before The Beatles broke up, Ringo Starr released Sentimental Journey (1970), a collection of standards.  The biggest pioneer, though, was Harry Nilsson, with A Little Touch of Schmilsson in the Night (1973).  That was followed by João Gilberto‘s Amoroso (1977) and Willie Nelson‘s smash hit Stardust (1978), and everything from Linda Ronstadt‘s What’s New (1983) to Sinéad O’Connor‘s Am I Not Your Girl? (1992), Rod Stewart‘s It Had to Be You… The Great American Songbook (2002), and beyond.  Sure, Dylan had done crooning before, if you paid attention (you probably didn’t).  But doing a standards album at age 73, well, it seems to prove Keith Richards‘ claim that Dylan’s “christian” phase was a ploy to sell records.  After all, to promote Shadows in the Night, Dylan gave an exclusive interview with the magazine for AARP (American Association for Retired Persons).  Who else but old, retired people want to buy an album of standards?  Yeah, Dylan sings better here than on Christmas in the Heart, but who cares?  His voice is still ravaged, and there are better singers out there to do pure singing.  And Frank Sinatra albums are still available…

Willie Nelson – Across the Borderline

Across the Borderline

Willie NelsonAcross the Borderline Columbia CK 52752 (1993)


It’s hard to mention Willie Nelson’s name without two things immediately coming to mind: marijuana and the IRS (Internal Revenue Service).  It’s the latter that provides the backdrop for this album.  Due to reliance on investment advice that turned out to be fraudulent, Willie accumulated a tax debt to which the government added numerous penalties so that it ballooned to many millions of dollars.  As it turns out, Willie didn’t manage his money well and his star (and record sales) had faded, leaving him without the funds to pay the bill.  So began a period of years when friends and fans purchased his old assets and sold them back to him–often for pennies on the dollar.  He even released an album direct-marketed over TV, The IRS Tapes: Who’ll Buy My Memories?, to help pay the IRS.  Eventually Willie won a lawsuit over the accounting firm that gave him the investment advise originally, and he settled the IRS debt and returned his full attention to the music business.  The first album after the IRS days drew to a close was Across the Borderline.

This album shows more promise than anything Willie had done since the mid/late 1970s.  Paul Simon‘s “American Tune” is a fantastic opener, and there is more great stuff in store like John Hiatt‘s “(The) Most Unoriginal Sin.”  But, the album doesn’t quite hold to that high standard throughout.  It feels like Willie is trying to follow the same path as Bob Dylan by recruiting a rock producer, Don Was (plus Paul Simon and Roy Halee).  Hell, Willie even teams up with Dylan for “Heartland” and covers another Dylan tune later on the album.  After a full decade of lazy irrelevance, Across the Borderline showed Willie still had good music in him.  But it would be in the late 1990s that he delivered his best recordings since the 70s, in Spirit and Teatro.

Willie Nelson – Yesterday’s Wine

Yesterday's Wine

Willie NelsonYesterday’s Wine RCA Victor LSP-4568 (1971)


Willie Nelson had a recording session scheduled in May 1971.  He had grown lazy as a songwriter over the years, and he didn’t really have material lined up for the album. The night before recording began (!), he wrote much of the material — at least seven of the songs — that ended up on Yesterday’s Wine.  The result is a major departure from his “typical Nashville” albums of the previous ten years.  This subdued concept album about coming to terms with religion in adulthood strips the music back to spare, intimate settings.  Often there is little more than Nelson’s voice, acoustic guitar and bass, with piano or steel guitar appearing only briefly, even just momentarily.  Although mellower and more laid-back (the Willie Way!), it’s a format a bit like Bob Dylan‘s albums Nashville Skyline or John Wesley Harding (not all that surprising, given that session man Charlie McCoy appears on both Dylan’s and Nelson’s albums).  The singer-songwriter movement sweeping the music industry seems to have had some effect on Nelson.  Recorded with a mix of Nelson’s touring band and a few session men, the album’s experiments don’t fully succeed.  There is a stiffness in the performances, with the backing band often just plodding along — it’s hard to blame them for lack of practice, though, when the songs were written the night before!  Nelson seems tentative in his vocals too.  He’s in new, unfamiliar territory, and he hasn’t entirely sorted out where he’s headed.  His vocals shed much of the crooning style that he relied on so much the previous decade.  The album’s greatest strength remains the excellent songwriting.  Chief among the new songs is the classic road rambling tale “Me and Paul,” written in honor of Nelson’s touring drummer and former pimp/hoodlum Paul English.