First on the block today is The Boxer, a work with a deceptive chill sound, despite some fairly rebellious and political messages. Considered by many fans to be The National's best album, The Boxer is best listened too as a whole, and on first listen may not seem to be a big stray from the National's repertoire. Matt Berninger's clever writing and pleasant sleepy drone are present on every track, both of which tend to create a sedated feel to the album, somewhat in the same vein that Mark Knopfler did for Dire Straits.
And, just like Knopfler's work in Dire Strait, it's therefore very easy to miss, listening casually, some incredible work by the bands musicians. It's The National's drummer, Bryan Devendorf, that really stands out on this album, supplying steady and complex rhythm to songs that are deceptively simple in their progression. Also, if you're like me and thus a sucker for a brass section, The National does excellent work with sax and trumpets, which adds just the right amount of life to the album.
The band's influences are fairly clear, and Berninger's songwriting is heavily informed by fellow baritones Nick Cave and Leonard Cohen. What I really admire in Berninger's lyrics is his ability to both write on a deeply personal level, while simultaneously writing about the world as a whole-This is done, as though to really get at the theme of the album off the bat, very nicely and succinctly in the opening song, "Fake Empire:"
"Stay out super late tonight
picking apples, making pies
put a little something in our lemonade and take it with us
we're half-awake in a fake empire"
It's a pretty strong juxtaposition for the opening lines of the album, but it sets the stage for really understanding the overarching point. I admire the band for still considering the "message" of the album, though it's not technically a concept album, even in an age where the album as an art form is dying.
Favorite Tracks: Fake Empire, Slow Show, Guest Room, Start a War
Next up is Lincoln, probably the best album by geek band veterans, They Might Be Giants. It's hard to quite know what to say about a band that has been around for so long and has produced so much excellent music, achieving a rabid cult fandom of multiple generations. Often called the "Hardest working band in music," it's true that the duo of Jonathan Flansburgh and John Linnel are mightily prolific. They released two albums in 2011 alone, one of them a studio album created entirely while the band was on tour (although it wasn't the better of the two).
Linnel, left, Flansburgh, Right |
I recommend Lincoln because, more so than most of their other major works, Lincoln contains the widest range of their music, from their more serious songs, to their abstract ones, to the more experimental, and to the silly/humor driven ones, and some of the best examples of those categories to boot. TMBG can sometimes be a difficult band to define what exactly their goals or overall message is, and I think Lincoln is one of the better lenses from which to view their work.
So lets break down their categories. First, I'll mention one of the more serious songs on this album, which has the feature of sounding a hell of a lot happier than it's lyrics indicate. One of the real gem's on this album, "They'll Need a Crane", is a rather depressing commentary on a relationship in disarray and damaging to the partners involved, held together by strong ties of co dependance and habit.
"They'll need a crane, they'll need a crane
To take the house he built for her apart
To make it break it's gonna take a metal ball hung from a chain
They'll need a crane, they'll need a crane
To pick the broken ruins up again
To mend her heart, to help him start to see a world apart from pain
Don't call me at work again no no the boss still hates me
I'm just tired and I don't love you anymore
And there's a restaurant we should check out where
The other nightmare people like to go
I mean nice people, baby wait,
I didn't mean to say nightmare"
A little dark, right? Keep in mind, that this is the same album that contains another song with the following sensibility:
"I'm going down to Cowtown
The cow's a friend to me
Lives beneath the ocean and that's where I will be
Beneath the waves, the waves
And that's where I will be
I'm gonna see the cow beneath the sea"
Linnel plays the accordion. Don't hold it against him. |
Favorite Tracks:
"Ana Ng," "Mr. Me" "I've Got a Match" "They'll Need a Crane" "Snowball in Hell"