BRIGHT EYES: A CHRISTMAS ALBUM (2002)
1) Away In A Manger; 2) Blue
Christmas; 3) Oh Little Town Of Bethlehem; 4) God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen; 5)
The First Noel; 6) Little Drummer Boy; 7) White Christmas; 8) Silent Night; 9)
Silver Bells; 10) Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas; 11) The Night Before
Christmas.
My favorite Bright Eyes album ever, bar none. Not that I'd want to ever
listen to it again, mind you, but there is one thing you cannot deny — no other
Bright Eyes album has such a concentrated wallop of brilliant, hook-filled melodies over the course of a measly
half-hour. ʽGod Rest Ye Merry Gentlemenʼ? Conor Oberst couldn't even begin to dream of writing such a brilliant tune.
ʽWhite Christmasʼ? The entire Bright Eyes catalog is exchangeable for that one,
and take half of Omaha's musical collectives as a free bonus. ʽThe Night
Before Christmasʼ? Now that's what I
call poetry, «you take all your smart modern writers», like Ray Davies said...
...okay, that's getting carried a bit too far,
I admit. But seriously, as far as Christmas albums go, this one is no worse
than most others, and as far as Bright Eyes albums go, I'd really rather have a
Christmas album from these people than sixty minutes of their original «tunes».
There is one added bonus: no matter how obnoxious and annoying Conor may seem
in person (in «musical» person, I mean: in «real» person, I have no idea), he
has this odd talent of attracting sympathetic female performers, sometimes
endowed with the prettiest of voices and nicest of attitudes. Here, his main
partner is Alabama-born Maria Taylor, who plays some of the keyboards, sings
about half of the songs (praise God!) and co-arranges most of them.
Production values remain targeted at the indie
market — several tunes are defiantly lo-fi, some are defiantly underarranged,
and almost everything is made to suffer from a mild form of
«un-listen-abili-tosis» one way or another (including sprinklings of electronic
noises, echo and other effects cast over traditional instruments, absurdly
slowed down tempos, whatever). But that's just to make sure that, God forbid,
any of your grandparents should unexpectedly take a liking to the album and
start playing it instead of their Sinatra records.
Under that slightly scratchy surface, however,
rests a perfectly normal Christmas album with very nice folksy crooning vocals
from Taylor (ʽAway In A Mangerʼ, ʽWhite Christmasʼ), attempts on Conor's part
to sing in a normal voice — yes, he
does have one, and even though it can never be completely free of whiny
overtones, they are actually quite in place on ʽBlue Christmasʼ, and even more
so on ʽHave Yourself A Merry Little Christmasʼ (after all, you can't expect to
actually have someone sing this song to you in a merry mood and get away with it, can you?).
There is even some modestly successful
experimentation here, like with ʽLittle Drummer Boyʼ, which they deconstruct by
distorting every sound channel, and then punch up with some crunchy martial
drumming to match the title; or with ʽSilent Nightʼ, where the vocals quickly
disappear, giving way to a slow, supposedly-mesmerizing mix of dreamy country
guitars with psychedelic effects. On the other hand, ending the album with a
full recital of ʽTwas The Night Before Christmasʼ, blandly performed by some
grumbly guy against a minimalistic piano backdrop, is, at best, an anticlimactic
idea — provided that one could expect a «climax» from an album like this in the
first place, of course.
Clearly, the whole thing was little more than a
killing-time project, or, perhaps, just a quick cash-in on Conor's growing
popularity — generous cash-in, since
the proceeds of the album have been said to go to the «Nebraska AIDS Project» —
but I was genuinely surprised at how much of the repulsive side of Bright Eyes
was cut off here, while still leaving some of Oberst's typical, and least
annoying, trademarks; and I am a bit puzzled at the frequently violent
rejection of the record encountered among the fans. Yes, it is a «generic
Christmas album», but hey, if you take Oberst as your guru, you have to try and
put some sense into it anyway; and if you do not take Oberst as your guru, it's all the more nice to realize
he's finally made an album where he isn't trying to teach you something. In the
general line of things, it is quickly forgettable; in the overall context of
Bright Eyes' history, it works better than I could have imagined.
George, sometimes you are such a troll creating reviews that seemingly is just there to incite flame from fans. I love it keep up the good work. I hope you keep on doing reviews of bands you despise even I don't know why you do this as they are even more entertaining then some of your serious reviews. Even by your standards, the intro is even more obnoxious (in a good way) then normal.
ReplyDeleteJust wondering, why did you get rid of the artist/band introduction essay. I would have love one for bright eyes. Anyway i'm looking forward to your Bruce Springsteen mark 2 reviews
George has mini introduction paragraphs on the HTML version of the review page:
ReplyDeletehttp://starling.rinet.ru/music/solitaire.htm
Yeah but what happen to the big career summary essay?
Delete