Au Pairs – Sense and Sensuality

Sense and Sensuality

Au PairsSense and Sensuality Kamera KAM 010 (1982)


After Au Pairs’ critically-lauded, feminist punk debut album Playing With a Different Sex, the band returned the following year with the much different Sense and Sensuality.  While the debut focused on compact, driving and funky punk songs, the follow-up moved in many different directions.  This eclectic approach has garnered it mixed reviews.  On the one hand, there is still a lot of feminist rage, and angular, funky cuts are still to be found (“Intact”).  Yet there is a slicker and more sinister approach to the way Sense and Sensualilty was recorded.  It makes a more ominous use of space.  Take “Stepping Out of Line,” for instance.  It has icy, repetitive guitar in abundance, highly compressed drums, and some synth, with the bass pushed far down in the mix.  It bears some resemblance to Magazine‘s Secondhand Daylight.  It’s the relative absence of a regular bass line that most noticeably differentiates this from the previous effort.  Elsewhere there are clear jazz influences, from the retro-lounge vocals on “Tongue in Cheek” to the slightly dissonant horn charts on “That’s When It’s Worth It.”  Songs like “Sex Without Stress” have a punk edge, but are altogether poppier than on the debut, foreshadowing the (much-maligned) direction Gang of Four would take the following year with Hard.  Au Pair’s experiments don’t fail, exactly, but the dark and brooding tone doesn’t generate the anthemic blend of feminist militancy and smart humor that has endeared so many fans to Playing With a Different Sex.

It’s worth noting that, like reissues of albums by X-Ray Spex and The Fall, reissues of Sense and Sensuality have reordered the original track listing — even Stepping Out of Line: The Anthology disregards the original track sequence.  It’s worth taking this in the original sequencing, that opens with “Don’t Lie Back,”  because that gives the lyrical and thematic focus of the songs a slower pace to develop.

Anthony Braxton – Eugene (1989)

Eugene (1989)

Anthony Braxton with the Northwest Creative OrchestraEugene (1989) Black Saint 120137-2 (1991)


A good one, though somehow falling just shy of being one to recommend without qualification.  Braxton, himself, plays exceptionally.  He sounds particularly enthusiastic in his solos.  The synthesizer, which is surprisingly reminiscent of late period Sun Ra (in a good way), is nonetheless as dated as a silver lamé jumpsuit from a 1960s sci-fi movie.  This live recording is also a merely adequate document of the performance at times, without the richness that surely must have been felt in-person at the performance. And Braxton on alto sax is often buried in the mix, but that’s not a major problem.  The album’s main strength is that despite featuring such unique and daring music, it maintains fluid and almost upbeat qualities that definitely stand out.  When this music gets going it is really fresh.  The use of electric guitar to produce crunchy yet sinuous blocks of sound anticipates John Shiurba and Mary Halvorson‘s work with Braxton more than a decade later, though the instrument has a relatively minor role here.  The best parts of the album are those reinterpreting big band jazz in new ways.

This album marked something of a turning point in Braxton’s orchestral jazz music.  It was the beginning of a new phase that left behind many of the reference points to traditional big band jazz that appeared sporadically through many earlier works and recordings.  Influences from some of Sun Ra‘s and Ornette Coleman‘s large-scale works became a little more clear.  Braxton also was transitioning to bands made up of students, as he would do with smaller groups as well.  Braxton may have better large ensemble recordings but this one represents an important change in approach that relied less on having “professional” musicians in large numbers available.  Even the Braxton novice will catch on to this quickly.

Willie Nelson – Songbird

Songbird

Willie NelsonSongbird Lost Highway B0006939-02 (2006)


The problem with Willie Nelson’s late career has been to find a convincing reason to bother recording yet another album.  He always had eclectic tastes and a fairly broad range to dabble with jazz, traditional pop, rock, and other little undercurrents in his music.  But he has already been there and done that.  Like the toils and troubles of Gene Hackman‘s character in Nicolas Roeg‘s Eureka (1983), who spent his life searching for a big gold strike and then hits it (right at the beginning of the film) only to struggle to find purpose for the rest of his life; it raises the question, “What next?”  Nelson has tried and succeeded in so many ways, there is a tendency to be lazy in the aftermath.  He has long had a lazy streak, which can be exacerbated by his new age fatalism — a sort of lopsided Zen practice that passively hopes for the best (with very much an emphasis on the “passively” part).  Much of his 1980s output smacked of pale attempts to recreate past successes, often with diminished enthusiasm.  It hasn’t helped that his enforced mantra of “positive thinking” largely stripped away one of his biggest talents: putting a good-natured, positive spin on hard, desolate music.  It’s that, plus a lot of Nelson’s increasingly half-hearted efforts in easy listening pap have tended to be quite commercially successful, providing all the wrong sorts of encouragements.

Songbird pairs Willie with Ryan Adams & The Cardinals.  Adams produces too.  This is something of an attempt to recreate the success of Teatro, by again pairing Nelson with a producer having solid rock credentials.  While there’s little doubt that Songbird tends toward pretty muted statements, it’s also a pleasant and consistent listen.  Adams keeps this fairly mellow and inoffensive, but his band The Cardinals succeeds in giving Willie accompaniment that is contemporary without feeling forced into some sort of faddish sound.  The title track is a Fleetwood Mac cover, and definitely the best offering here.  Willie doesn’t exactly turn in many committed performances, but even on autopilot his vocals suffice.  The closer “Amazing Grace” is a spooky, weird rendition, almost as unexpected as John Cale‘s deconstruction of “Heartbreak Hotel” on Slow Dazzle 30 years earlier.  Yet another cover of “Hallelujah” is filler here, but, if you must have filler, why not a classic Leonard Cohen tune?  While Songbird may not be Willie at his finest, and it may not always be exciting, it still works as sort of an inoffensive album of undemanding indie/alt country.

Erykah Badu – New Amerykah Part One (4th World War)

New Amerykah Part One (4th World War)

Erykah BaduNew Amerykah Part One (4th World War) Universal Motown B0010800-02 (2008)


I don’t listen to much R&B these days.  And why should I?  Most of it is that bad…you know, rank, superficial posturing on nothing more than ridiculous and unending “American/Pop Idol” melisma.  I won’t even get into the Amy Winehouse types.  It’s been years since anything close to as good as Voodoo, or even The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill, has crossed my path.  This New Amerykah Part One (4th World War) is something though.  Erykah Badu has an unusual voice.  Her lyrical subject matter is, on the one hand, nothing new, but, on the other hand, there is nothing in her songs that is anything less than supremely relevant.  The music leans on hip hop and darker Seventies soul without sounding like it’s trying too hard to sound like either.  If you want soul/R&B that makes an effort to be meaningful, then you’ve come to the right spot.  She released a Part Two that felt considerably more limp and  less engaged.

Willie Nelson – American Classic

American Classic

Willie NelsonAmerican Classic Blue Note 67197 (2009)


These “standards” albums are so common, that you almost expect that mild-mannered jazz combos record piles of them just to leave “in the can,” waiting for celebrity vocalists to come along and drop in some singing on top.  Willie Nelson has done plenty of these before (Stardust, Healing Hands of Time, etc.), this one merely in the format of the revived Blue Note Records pop jazz aesthetic.  It’s stripped of any real charisma, ensuring that it’s a real snoozer.  Yet, this one’s professional through-and-through.  My mom would sure enjoy this, as she loves vapid, lowest common denominator, boring housewife sort of albums like this and Rod Stewart‘s It Had to Be You… The Great American Songbook.  But I’m selling this short!  It is also suited as background music for a genteel businessman’s cocktail lounge or a waiting room.

Willie Nelson – Countryman

Countryman

Willie NelsonCountryman Lost Highway B0004706-02 (2005)


Oh, Willie.  Countryman is his reggae album “10 years in the making” (says the album sleeve — in reality it must be that no one wanted to release it).  The one inspired choice is a cover of Johnny Cash‘s “I’m a Worried Man,” which Cash wrote about a man he encountered in Jamaica, sung here as a duet with Toots Hibbert of Toots & The Maytals.  Otherwise, this tiresome genre exercise has nothing to offer.  “Straight” country versions of reggae songs (like he does for “The Harder They Come” here) would have worked better than Willie singing against a reggae beat.  Still waiting on Willie’s hip-hop album.

Willie Nelson & Asleep at the Wheel – Willie and the Wheel

Willie and the Wheel

Willie Nelson & Asleep at the WheelWillie and the Wheel Bismeaux Records BR 1287 (2009)


Willie Nelson has always loved western swing.  Recent albums like You Don’t Know Me evidenced that fascination.  Teamed with Asleep at the Wheel, Willie and the Wheel is as self-consciously retro as it could be.  Every song reaches to reproduce the sound of a classic 1940s cut by Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys.  This record is a ton of fun.  Yet, it also can’t get past its obligations to maintaining its “retro” sound.  So this glides by somewhat on the surface.  Willie has offered quite a lot of music at that level in his later years.  It’s almost a very good one, but lacks a little something hard to put a finger on.

Slavoj Žižek – Guardian Webchat

Link to an online webchat hosted by The Guardian newspaper with Slavoj Žižek:

“Slavoj Žižek webchat – as it happened”

Here’s a select quote:

“I think boredom is the beginning of every authentic act. *** Boredom opens up the space, for new engagements. Without boredom, no creativity. If you are not bored, you just stupidly enjoy the situation in which you are.”

Pescado Rabioso – Artaud

Artaud

Pescado RabiosoArtaud Talent SE-408 (1973)


A bit derivative of a lot of folk/rock of the day, like Richie Havens, Neil Young, Tim Buckley, Bread, America, Wishbone Ash, Roy Harper et al., but at its best Artaud offers a compelling distillation of lots of currents running through popular music at the time.  There is a searching quality here.  Argentina had struggled through power battles between military and civilian rulers.  As a peripheral economy, they made fitful efforts to industrialize.  Just the other side of the border in Chile, of course, 1973 saw the U.S.-sponsored coup against President Allende.  Turbulent times.  In them, Luis Alberto Spinetta and Pescado Rabioso (translation: Rabid Fish) attempted to forge an unique identity among the remnants and detritus of Western rock and folk.  They don’t completely break the mold.  They still do manage to forge something of their own.  Some of the most memorable moments (“Las habladurías del mundo,” “Bajan”) have more burning electric guitar solos than much folk of the day.  Spinetta’s guitar playing has hints of forward-looking modernity in its vaguely hippie rock foundations.  The tone of the album is a little darker than what would have been popular in much English-language singer-songwriter music at the time.  It also bears no resemblance to the bright and brash psychedelic and distinctily South American elements of Tropicália that evolved in nearby military-ruled Brazil in the previous few years.  Little touches, like the slightly bluesy and jazzy flair of “Cementerio club” and “Superchería” and the acoustic intimacy of “Por,” keep things interesting.  On the whole this is eclectic.  It’s no surprise then that it’s also a little uneven (the nine-minute-plus “Cantata de puentes amarillos” drags at times).  It’s a hell of a lot more satisfying than a lot of latter-day acts — almost forty years later — like Jack White that also take a highly derivative approach to songcraft, because when it hits this stuff seems honest and thoughtful rather than being just lazy approximations of what are thought to be successfully established formulas.