CAMERA OBSCURA: MY MAUDLIN CAREER (2009)
1) French Navy; 2) The
Sweetest Thing; 3) You Told A Lie; 4) Away With Murder; 5) Swans; 6) James; 7)
Careless Love; 8) My Maudlin Career; 9) Forests And Sands; 10) Other Towns And
Cities; 11) Honey In The Sun.
Slowly, without excessive fuss or hurry, Camera
Obscura are learning to write songs. If their early albums included, at best,
one track — nay, scratch that, one chorus — that was nimble enough to hop on
the last wagon of your drifting brain, My
Maudlin Career already has, what, two or three songs of that caliber?
Something like that. In a sense, considering that the music has always been
extremely nice, it is a joy of sorts to watch them grow, at a snail's pace, into
more experienced hookwriters than they used to be.
Clearly, they have their own good understanding
of what is and what is not a hook: like last time around, they plop their
catchiest song right in the beginning. ʽFrench Navyʼ is an emotional sequel to
ʽLloyd, I'm Ready...ʼ, but this time, puts its main strength into the music
rather than the vocals — the song's main melody, carried by strings rather than
guitar, is lushly baroque and exuberant, using its simplicity to great effect.
Of course, there is no concealing the primary target audience of the song,
either: the very first line goes "Spent a week in a dusty library..."
and you have no doubts whatsoever that this is exactly where the protagonist did spend a week, or maybe even more,
prior to "meeting by the moon on a silvery lake" (actually, I presume
that the silvery lake was dreamt of in the same dusty library, provided, of
course, that the dusty library itself was not dreamt of in some circle of virtual
reality).
Anyway, ʽFrench Navyʼ goes beyond lovable and
becomes quite catchy — as does ʽSwansʼ, with its recurring nursery-rhyme
musical theme (too cutesy and derivative to count as a musical achievement on
its own, but the theme itself is really only a teaser for the rest of the
song), and the closing ʽHoney In The Sunʼ, where, since the song refers to
Mexico City, they come up with the great idea of bringing in a Mexican-style
brass section; in the end, the ascending-descending brass riff of the song
becomes its high point and a great way to finish off the album with its second-catchiest
musical number.
That does make three songs that I actually had
the pleasure to namedrop, rather than
just a boring obligation, which makes the whole thing at least as good as Let's Get Out Of This Country. The rest
still suffers from the band's usual weaknesses — too limp, too reflective of
second-rate folk-rock and country-rock material... and whose idea was it,
anyway, to include a sentimental acoustic ballad named ʽJamesʼ? With the
atmosphere involved, it gives me fleeting visions of James Taylor, and I thought
Camera Obscura were only tangentially related to that vibe.
I must also complain about the inefficiency of
the title track: apparently, like last time around, we have to understand it
(since it gives its name to the entire album) as some sort of «mission statement»,
but the statement in question does not go over the usual level of triteness and
whining — the predictable he-broke-my-heart-I'm-not-letting-it-happen-again
stuff where you absolutely know for sure that, with this kind of singing and
attitude, this will happen over and
over again. As Ms. Campbell puts her "this maudlin career must come to an
end / I don't want to be sad again" on endless repeat, and all of the
band's instruments lock and circle around it, drowning out each other in an
infinite loop, you know that this
maudlin career has only just started, and that, even if Camera Obscura ever end
up mastering the speed of the Ramones, they will always be sad. Not because Tracyanne's next boyfriend dumped her once
again, but because it simply becomes her. So why not just accept things at face
value?
That said, nobody really needs to pay that much
attention to the lyrics of Camera Obscura, regardless of whether they come
across as intentionally hyper-intellectualized (as they did on Let's Get Out...) or intentionally
downgraded to college-girl romantic impressionism (as they do here). The only
thing worth remembering is that they do their twee thing once again, and land a
couple more well-placed melodic hits than is the usual norm — reason enough for
one more thumbs
up if you like this genre at all.
Check "My Maudlin Career" (CD) on Amazon
Check "My Maudlin Career" (MP3) on Amazon
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