BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN: DEVILS & DUST (2005)
1) Devils & Dust; 2) All
The Way Home; 3) Reno; 4) Long Time Comin'; 5) Black Cowboys; 6) Maria's Bed;
7) Silver Palomino; 8) Jesus Was An Only Sun; 9) Leah; 10) The Hitter; 11) All
I'm Thinkin' About; 12) Matamoros Banks.
If you are not a dedicated Boss man, most
likely you will not be interested in any Springsteen albums past The Rising. He deserves mega-respect
for the effort, which was not only his most gargantuan, but also most daring
and experimental blast in years — but it seems to have drained his creativity,
and everything released since then played it safer, homelier, and more
predictable. The man had little left to prove, after all, and was only too
happy, it seems, to slip into a stable «elder statesman» image, promoted by
such institutions as Rolling Stone (whose editors would never dare to give any
of his subsequent records anything less than 4.5 stars) and the Rock'n'Roll
Hall Of Fame (where he is one of the most frequent guests whenever anything
presumably important is going on). This is not to say that he's turned to crap
or anything — however «frozen» his sound has become, it is at least frozen in a
tasteful configuration, unlike, say, Aerosmith — but, I repeat, unless you are
a diehard fan, it is not easy to get a natural adrenaline rush from listening
to anything he created after the Twin Tower crash.
With Devils
& Dust, released three years after the triumph of The Rising, Bruce repeats the old trick of «cooling down» — a
low-key, largely acoustic record, made without the help of the E Street Band,
to reroute the huge external emotional rush of its predecessor and internalize it. A move that, by now, has
become all too predictable, and all too dangerous, given how The Boss is such a
master of the «big and bulging», but not doing so good at the «subtle and
nuanced», where he'd never really managed to dethrone Dylan or Johnny Cash.
Luckily, this is not a flat-out bad
album like Tom Joad; but neither
does it have any staggering highlights like Nebraska's ʽState Trooperʼ or ʽAtlantic Cityʼ.
Then again, on Nebraska what we saw was a still young, hungry, and angry Bruce Springsteen,
and even some of its worst songs could still vibrate with emotional tension.
Here, what we have is an old, tired, and contemplative Bruce Springsteen — and,
I dunno, he might not really be that
old and tired, but he's playing out that role anyway. The title track was
written from the perspective of a soldier in the Iraq war, and it is a very
quiet, soulful, mournful, and maybe even bashful acoustic ballad that simply describes the psychological effects of
war rather than rails against them. It
is decent, but it is absolutely unexceptional — lyrics, vocals, melody,
arrangement, atmosphere, all of this is rather standard singer-songwriter
fare. And by 2005, I'm sure, all of us have heard so many anti-war songs that
this one will not be likely to come across as an amazing epiphany. All I can
say is that it sounds «authentic», like one more professionally performed exercise
in folk-style songwriting — and the same goes for just about everything else
here.
Of course, the Boss remains a revered word man
to an even larger extent than a music man, and he offers plenty of points for
lyrical discussions here — in ʽRenoʼ, for instance, he imagines (or remembers?
whatever) an encounter with a local hooker in almost pornographically explicit
details, making his subset of housewife fans blush all across the
neighborhood; of course, the main
point is not that the song features the line "two hundred dollars straight
in, two-fifty up the ass", but that even during a quick local dirty sex act,
the protagonist is still reminiscing of "sunlight streaming thru your
hair" and "that smile coming out 'neath your hat" — but, you
know, those kinds of lines we all
know in Boss songs already, while "two-fifty up the ass" is
definitely a novelty. And then there's ʽThe Hitterʼ, which is his personal
ʽThe Boxerʼ, only set to some Woody Guthrie melody rather than a Paul Simon
one. And then there are stories of ramblers, cowboys, lots of Mexican imagery
for some reason, and a bit of Jesus on the side.
But even if you can still extract a few samples
of clever folk-poetry images from some of the songs (not all, though — ʽJesus
Was An Only Sonʼ is so oddly straightforward, it could just as well have been
an outtake from Dylan's Saved), as songs, these things aren't all too
compelling. Looking back one more time, I can remember being mildly entertained
by two of them — ʽMaria's Bedʼ has some seductive slide guitar riffs, played à la George Harrison circa 1973-74, a
catchy vocal melody, and an irresistible toe-tapping groove; and ʽAll I'm
Thinkin' Aboutʼ is a humorous folk boogie where Bruce is attempting to express
his feelings for his baby by rising all, or most, of the way up to falsetto —
it's shakey, but fun.
Unfortunately, both of these songs are
semi-comic interludes, and it is the «heavy», «serious» stuff that largely
leaves me unmoved. It's all listenable — it's simply not clear why exactly we
need somebody of Bruce Springsteen's caliber to perform it, when any
experienced old-timer from Nashville or Oklahoma could easily do instead. Worst
of all, these really aren't deep
songs: this is Springsteen trying to write something in the half-century-old
folk idiom, instead of adapting that idiom to his own personality, as he'd
occasionally done in the past. Perhaps this is a noble case of artistic
humility, but if so, I would be perfectly happy to bow down in acknowledgment
— humility is a rare and respectable quality — and move along to the next
record.
"All I'm Thinkin' About" is not the only song where Springsteen sings in a high-pitched falsetto. Check out "Lift Me Up" from the movie "Limbo" which was originally available on the third disc of a compilation album "The Essential":
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Well, it's not quite as dull as "..Joad", but it's an uglier, more unpleasant album, where that one was merely depressing. My favorite is "All the Way Home", a suprisingly upbeat pop-folk-rocker that sounds strangely (if welcomingly) out of place. By this point, though, I didn't need anymore of Bruce as a folkie social commentator.
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