Samo Lambchopi mogu dokazati da duša postoji. I da je plava. I zakopana u zemlju.
"For the first 20 seconds of Mr. M, all the
listener will hear is the sound of a string section, gliding, pretty,
and warm, like something from an old Disney movie. The strings are
followed by brushed, rolling snare drums. Soon, Kurt Wagner, the band's
singer, stumbles into the mix. "Don't know what the fuck they talk
about," he sings. His voice sounds beery and disoriented. It seems
possible that he's in the wrong room.
Nothing on Mr. M is designed to pop, not in the conventional sense of the word. To describe the band's current style is to invoke genres with an almost negative cultural cachet: lounge, 1970s country, Burt Bacharach-- styles so fixated on sounding high-class that they run the risk of feeling trashy. On paper, Lambchop is a band that would appeal primarily to grandparents and drunks.
Wagner's voice is a low, wounded-sounding instrument whose character has only deepened with time (though Wagner, in his self-effacing Wagnerian way, has attributed it to cigarettes). At root, he's a crooner, but his croon sounds alternately fragile and gruff-- the elderly neighbor who returns your lost dog one day and commands you to step off his azaleas the next, spittle hanging from his lip.
His lyrics are a mix of minor, concrete observations and poetic flights. "We have crawled among the elements, taking pictures of our phones" is one. "Sleep makes you possible" is another. His writing has the power to transform the everyday into a mystery, but his voice-- and the music behind it-- attempts to transform the mystery into something unplugged and emotionally direct-- to make "The wine tasted like sunshine in a basement" sound a little bit like "I love you."
If Lambchop's music bears some essential ambition, it's to marry ambivalence and sentimentality. My favorite turn on Mr. M is on "Buttons", a portrait of a small-town loser by a narrator who seems to neither love nor hate the man he sings about. "Been better times for those that are in trouble," Wagner sings, "and maybe there'll be better times for you. The weight you've gained has made your head a bubble, and your button eyes are brown and not her-- black and blue."
On the last words-- "black and blue"-- Wagner's voice warps into an almost grotesque croon, like he's either about to giggle or weep over the string section, and yet the image in my head is of a pudgy, small-town loser and the woman who he may or may not have beaten with his own sad fists. What we are supposed to do with these mixed emotional cues, I have no idea. It's to Lambchop's credit that their music avoids comfortable resolutions. Instead, it hangs there, no moral, no judgment.
Coming from some singers, the line might sound like a challenge, but coming from Wagner, it's a simple admission. Lambchop
is a band that has spent the past 20 years in Nashville building its
own idiosyncratic universe. For better and worse, the current state of
music, its trends and its innovations, pass them by completely. Even
during the days when alt-country seemed like a viable art form, Wagner's
ornery sense of humor-- the kind that drives you to cap your album with
a 40-second-long song called "I Sucked My Boss' Dick"-- made them seem
totally out-of-step with their supposed contemporaries. In a lot of
ways, Lambchop is a band that seems committed to its own irrelevance.
Irrelevance, though, isn't a burden for Lambchop as much as it is a jumping off point for what makes them them. "I see your Pitchfork I-rock saviors," goes one line on 2006's Damaged--
"I'm sorry, I still prefer Jim Nabors." If you aren't sure who Jim
Nabors is and you're still reading our reviews about I-rock saviors,
you've unknowingly participated in Wagner's self-definition: He hears
the conversation going on but damn if he'll take part in it.Nothing on Mr. M is designed to pop, not in the conventional sense of the word. To describe the band's current style is to invoke genres with an almost negative cultural cachet: lounge, 1970s country, Burt Bacharach-- styles so fixated on sounding high-class that they run the risk of feeling trashy. On paper, Lambchop is a band that would appeal primarily to grandparents and drunks.
Wagner's voice is a low, wounded-sounding instrument whose character has only deepened with time (though Wagner, in his self-effacing Wagnerian way, has attributed it to cigarettes). At root, he's a crooner, but his croon sounds alternately fragile and gruff-- the elderly neighbor who returns your lost dog one day and commands you to step off his azaleas the next, spittle hanging from his lip.
His lyrics are a mix of minor, concrete observations and poetic flights. "We have crawled among the elements, taking pictures of our phones" is one. "Sleep makes you possible" is another. His writing has the power to transform the everyday into a mystery, but his voice-- and the music behind it-- attempts to transform the mystery into something unplugged and emotionally direct-- to make "The wine tasted like sunshine in a basement" sound a little bit like "I love you."
If Lambchop's music bears some essential ambition, it's to marry ambivalence and sentimentality. My favorite turn on Mr. M is on "Buttons", a portrait of a small-town loser by a narrator who seems to neither love nor hate the man he sings about. "Been better times for those that are in trouble," Wagner sings, "and maybe there'll be better times for you. The weight you've gained has made your head a bubble, and your button eyes are brown and not her-- black and blue."
On the last words-- "black and blue"-- Wagner's voice warps into an almost grotesque croon, like he's either about to giggle or weep over the string section, and yet the image in my head is of a pudgy, small-town loser and the woman who he may or may not have beaten with his own sad fists. What we are supposed to do with these mixed emotional cues, I have no idea. It's to Lambchop's credit that their music avoids comfortable resolutions. Instead, it hangs there, no moral, no judgment.
Apprehending Mr. M does not take a genius, nor does
it take an English degree, nor does it take 180-gram vinyl and an $800
Scandanavian turntable with counterweights made out of rare geodes. What
it does take, I think, is patience. I like tarted-up, throat-grabbing
music as much as the next frantically inattentive twentysomething. I
also find a deep satisfaction in Lambchop's subtlety, which never makes
the mistake of thinking that being high-minded or instructive will get
us over to their weird team. Nobody, not even the most depraved among
us, needs to be slapped on the wrist in order to see beauty. And still,
despite Wagner's protests that he doesn't know what the fuck they talk
about, Mr. M sounds aware of itself as an argument-- an argument for the kind of patience the music on it demands.
And so we return to this idea of Lambchop's irrelevance. For the purpose of barroom reductions, Mr. M
sounds like a bunch of guys tapping delicately on acoustic instruments
from deep within a mausoleum, or the sound of wind blowing gently
through the pages of an open book resting on a front-porch rocking
chair. But how rare is it that a band asks you to listen to so little,
and how much rarer is it that they make it sound like so much?" - Pitchfork
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