CASS McCOMBS: WIT'S END (2011)
1) County Line; 2) The Lonely
Doll; 3) Buried Alive; 4) Saturday Song; 5) Memory's Stain; 6) Hermit's Cave;
7) Pleasant Shadow Song; 8) A Knock Upon The Door.
In 2011, Cass McCombs released two complete
albums — one that, according to him, was thought out slowly and meticulously,
and another that was punched out more or less instantaneously. And I do
believe that with the first notes of Wit's
End, it becomes easy to guess which one was which without having to listen
to the second one — the words «slow» and «dreary» do not even begin to describe
the lethargic coma that it is capable of inducing.
Now, of all people, I shouldn't be the one to be complaining about lethargy in
reference to a Cass McCombs record. I mean, I was totally seduced by the
multi-layered, aching, almost transcendental lethargy of A, and all through the next three albums I kept complaining how any
attempt to introduce some energy, speed, and classic pop hookiness into his
songs only detract from his strongest talents — so nothing could be more fine
than a full return to the slowcore formula of A, right?.. Well, turns out it depends on certain conditions.
Take the second song here, ʽThe Lonely Dollʼ.
It's five and a half minutes of a slow, never-changing acoustic waltz, accompanied,
I believe, by a soothing celesta, so that you could be plunged into a bit of a
«dollhouse magic» state — and with quasi-autobiographical lyrics that tell of
the protagonist's relation with "a singing doll and her grievous
call". Nice? Nice. But five and a half minutes? If anything, the song
sounds like a minimalist version of Dylan's ʽ4th Time Aroundʼ, borrowing the same
vocal arrangement (in fact, I'm almost sure Bob could sue if he wanted to), but
with less attractive lyrics, less intricate musical texture, and set at an even
slower tempo. And the worst thing about it is, it does not cast a magic spell.
It simply feels too obvious, and Cass' vocals have become so sweet and smooth
by now, you could almost mistake him for James friggin' Taylor — who needs it?
The whole record is a collection of similar
lullabies, some of them crossing the seven minute border: ʽMemory's Stainʼ is a
particular offender, being also set to waltz tempo and eventually just settling
down into a snail-paced ambient instrumental, where a piano and a bass clarinet
duet with each other in some parallel universe where five seconds of their time is one minute in ours. And wherever you go, you find
McCombs singing in the same quiet, semi-whispered manner, intentionally
avoiding anything that could be
construed as emotional sharpness. This could be legit if the songs weren't so
lazy — but McCombs is not a great composer, and all of these chord sequences
you've already heard millions of times before, and now that he is focused on
keeping his arrangements as sparse as possible, always centered around a
simplistic piano or acoustic guitar part... really, whenever this album is at
its worst (and that happens quite often), it is simply impossible to treat it
as anything more than background ambience.
I count exactly two songs here that I wouldn't mind hearing again. The opener,
ʽCounty Lineʼ, shares the typical flaws of the album — slow, lethargic,
criminally underarranged — but, perhaps by accident, it falls upon a great
descending chord change right at the beginning: "on my way to you, old
county", he sings, and then plunges downwards: "...hoping nothing's
changed", with an air of bleakness and a sense of black depth from which
you know that everything's changed,
and few of it for the better. Later on, he continues adding great touches to
the performance, using all of his typical range tricks, from baritone to
falsetto, and that proverbial heart-tug is there all right. Alas, the next six
songs have absolutely none of that — and in order to get to the album's second
relative success, you have to allow for a 30-minute nap on the couch.
That second relative success is once again
Dylan-related, because it's sort of an attempt to create his own equivalent of
ʽDesolation Rowʼ. Yes, you guessed right: the song goes on for almost 10
minutes (and wouldn't you know it, it's another
waltz!), with eight verses (should be ten — the Dylan song has ten), each of
which ends with the declamation of the song's title, ʽA Knock Upon The Doorʼ.
The lyrics are just as impenetrable (maybe even more impenetrable), but there's
some sense of humor here, and a whiff of intrigue and mystery as opposed to
nothing but somnambulance on the previous six songs. Needless to say, the
10-minute length is still excruciating for such simplicity and such slowness,
and it is all the more frustrating when you think that, had he only brought
back the multi-layered baroque arrangements of A, he might have totally gotten away with it (remember that with
Dylan, for instance, much of the saving grace of ʽSad-Eyed Lady Of The
Lowlandsʼ was provided by the energetic and dense backing band). Still, perhaps
it is precisely the song length that at least makes certain there's some
impression of the song back in your head once the album is over.
On the whole, how could I defend this? It's
almost as if the guy got so totally self-confident, he now believes that an
album without interesting melodies, without creative and complex arrangements,
with intentionally lazy singing, with ridiculously outstretched song lengths,
and with arrogantly obvious Dylanisms will suffice to get fan support and rave
reviews in the indie press (and it did: "the enigmatic singer-songwriter
returns with a dark set of songs backed by spare instrumentation and crafts
what might be his best LP yet" — our friends from PitchforkMedia), mostly
centered around the lyrics and their sad sad sad tales of loneliness,
depression, and nostalgia. And hey, I love
sad sad sad tales of loneliness, depression, and nostalgia, but goddammit, there's
so many of them on the market already... and just as we'd finally found a guy
who could seemingly tell them in a fresh, unconventional manner, he goes all
lazy and generic on us. And no, scattered lyrical references to Abelard,
Admiral Byrd, and Memphis-huckster-Hitler-hustler do not really count as redemptive
factors, so a thumbs
down it is. Talk about a self-referential LP title — what a bummer.
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