1) Rev It Up; 2) Song Of Angels; 3) Man With A Gun; 4) Let It Come Down; 5) Cherokee Chief; 6) A Perfect Lie; 7) Are You Running?; 8) Breakdown In The Passing Lane; 9) A.K.A. Love; 10) Weʼre Always Talking; 11) Bobby.
General verdict: Nothing outstanding as usual, but quite a few unexpectedly cool grooves — I guess that the word ʽcasualʼ is truly key in this context.
Technically speaking, Jerryʼs second album is
actually credited to a band called «Jerry
Harrison: Casual Gods», since the exact same moniker would be featured on his
next one, Walk On Water. For some
strange reason, he refrained from using an apostrophe — perhaps thinking that «Jerry
Harrisonʼs Casual Gods» would sound too arrogant (let alone «Jerry Harrisonʼs
casual gods walk on water»!!!). But the idea makes sense: with ex-Stop Making Sense pals Alex Weir and
Bernie Worrell featured throughout the record, it is as if Casual Gods is supposed to be the true Talking Heads, carrying on the old flame even as Byrne gets
more and more buried in his other projects, and usurps the bandʼs name for releasing
pop albums with nary a sign of the old funkiness.
It works inasmuch as Casual Gods seems to be, at the very least, an improvement over the
second-rate mediocrity of The Red And
The Black. That record, coming fresh off the heels of Remain In Light, could not help looking like a ten dollar bottle of
cheap wine next to the rarest of vintages. By 1988, however, «Talking Heads»
and «groove-based music» were no longer synonymous, and Harrison may have seen
that as his chance — from the very first notes, you can sense a touch of
inspiration and, most importantly, genuine energy of somebody who has clearly been
missing this kind of fun for quite some time now.
On the whole, Casual Gods is a soft electro-pop record: programmed percussion and
harsh, robotic interlocking synth and guitar riffs form its backbone, with the
differences being largely limited to tempo and mood (rowdy vs. romantic). Parts
of it are reminiscent of Bowieʼs output in the Eighties, while other parts more
openly follow the guidelines of Funkadelic (with Worrell around, that should
come as no surprise); one thing it does not
manage to do is establish a distinct identity for Jerry Harrison, but perhaps
that was not even the plan. The plan, so it seems, was simply to create a bit
of intelligent dance music — actually, at times we might even need to scrap the
«intelligent» part, because the opening lines of the opening number ʽRev It Upʼ
("got the heat turned on and the windows down / sheʼs hell on wheels,
telling everyone how good it feels") surely bear the stamp of Brian
Johnsonʼs and Gene Simmonsʼ approval.
That is
a bit of a problem: I really like the old-school-turned-new-school groove of ʽRev
It Upʼ, and it gets me blood pumpinʼ and all, but I cannot come to terms with
Jerry Harrison, the typical nerdy art-rock guy, suddenly coming out as the big
hunky ladiesʼ man. The only thing to do is just ignore the lyrics and give
yourself in to the groove: in any case, it is hard to associate this particular
line of cold, robotic funkiness with «sexy», so the only thing that falls out
of line are the lyrics (not their delivery), and it is easy to ignore them... though
this is precisely why, when all is said and done, Casual Gods could never succeed in truly taking over the legacy of
the «real Talking Heads».
The good thing is that there are truly quite a
few solid dance grooves here. ʽRev It Upʼ is one, but I like the rapid-fire
fussiness of ʽSong Of Angelsʼ, the gruff get-out-of-my-way riff of ʽCherokee
Chiefʼ, the nonchalant dialog between the disco bass and the alarmed synth
blasts of ʽAre You Running?ʼ, and the relentless (though somewhat amorphous)
bubbling of ʽBobbyʼ. All of these are perhaps not quite enough to earn Jerry
the title of «accomplished groovemaster», but they all have staying power and
emotional resonance — ʽAre You Running?ʼ is probably as close as he ever comes
to matching Byrneʼs paranoia, and ʽCherokee Chiefʼ is a nice slab of musical
satire that, for some reason, David had always avoided, perhaps seeing himself
way above cheap potshots at Mr. Big Man. Jerry does get away with it quite
fine, though.
Some things do not work that well in the
context of the times: thus, ʽBreakdown In The Passing Laneʼ rather blatantly
rips off the main groove of ʽFreak Out!ʼ, and a couple other tunes sound too
much like second-hand Duran Duran pastiches. Arguably the best known song is
ʽMan With A Gunʼ, which somehow made it into a movie by Zalman (Sleazebag) King
and into Jonathan Demmeʼs Something Wild — but musically, it is
one of the least interesting things here, riding a stiff, unchangeable
quasi-romantic riff throughout and largely sounding like a sermon on the overriding
powers of love. Perhaps Lou Reed could have made something out of this
material, but Jerryʼs delivery is fairly flat, as usual.
It is interesting to note how «early Eighties»
the album sounds in general — for a record released in 1988, it is almost
outdated, with a «flat» rather than «deep» echo on the drums and quirky, thin, New
Wavish guitar tones that were quite out of fashion by the decadeʼs end. It is
as if Jerry commandeered a mini-time machine that took him about five years
back, so that he could make himself a proper sequel to Speaking In Tongues. Nevertheless, the album still managed to hit
the Top 100, and ʽRev It Upʼ even made it as high as #7 on the charts — perhaps
the public did hook up to its ironically hedonistic vibe after all. These days,
I could only recommend the record to big fans of all sorts of electro-pop: it
hardly has any lasting intellectual value or shows big bright flashes of
charismatic personality — but you can
have honest and genuine fun with about half of it, I think. Then again, what
else do you expect of your average casual god?