DAVID BYRNE: DAVID BYRNE (1994)
1) A Long Time Ago; 2) Angels; 3) Crash; 4) A
Self-Made Man; 5) Back In The Box; 6) Sad Song; 7) Nothing At All; 8) My Love
Is You; 9) Lilies Of The Valley; 10) You & Eye; 11) Strange Ritual; 12)
Buck Naked.
General verdict: Meet the new David "Schopenhauer" Byrne,
now putting his musical legacy in the service of pessimistic sociology and
whatnot.
A self-titled album in the middle of an
artistʼs career frequently implies a self-reboot, some sort of impulsive
awakening which may or may not work, but at least shows that the artist is
trying. In the case of David Byrne, however, it almost looks like this lack of
a title was merely meant to agree that the artist no longer has anything
particularly interesting to say, period.
This is not a bad record, mind you. It may
sound very boring first time around, then it may slowly begin to grow as you
realize that it is very deeply personal, and that being subjected to a deeply
personal experience experienced by somebody with the talent, intellect, and
life story of a David Byrne is, at the very least... useful, if not necessarily enjoyable. But this is what it is: much
more of a personal confession in a state of mid-life crisis than a musical
piece. Once you come to terms with the fact that almost nothing worthy of
serious attention goes on here, musically, it may be easier to accept everything
else that is of value. Yet I cannot help feeling a little weird, and sad, when
it turns out that even the frickinʼ Tom
Tom Club has finally made a jump on David Byrne in terms of musical
experimentation and innovation.
I do not really know what was going on in
Davidʼs life at the age of 42, but I have recently been through that age
myself, and that state of mind is relatable. He is not exploring any issues
here that he hadnʼt had at least a small brush with previously, but he is now
picking at them with melancholic ferociousness: "I kept my feelings to
myself / Until the perfect moment comes", he states on the very first
track. I am not sure why that "perfect moment" had to be 1994, a year
that, to the best of my memory, was hardly one of those surrender-all-hope
years — and this, in fact, might be one of the main reasons why David Byrne disappointed just about
everybody and is still rated fairly low on the Byrne-o-meter by critics and
fans alike. Ironically, the record just might feel closer to home in 2020; or
maybe it is simply my own growing old, because, had I actually heard it fresh
from the oven, Iʼd probably dismiss it just as well.
But oh yeah, music comes first. And musically,
this is not just a complete departure from the odd Latin-funk-pop synthesis
that Byrne curated all through the Eighties; this is actually a mish-mash of
styles — Talking Heads styles, solo Byrne styles, other artistsʼ styles — where
it is obvious that David tries not to bore you with a monotonous approach, but
is also obvious that he is just rewriting old patterns. Many of the songs have
evident progenitors. ʽAngelsʼ, for instance, uses a bass pattern very similar
to ʽOnce In A Lifetimeʼ. The playful rhythmics and screechy guitar of ʽBack In
The Boxʼ take cues from the upbeat material on Little Creatures (hilariously, though, I just realized that the
main melody may very well have been subconsciously influenced by Genesisʼ ʽI
Canʼt Danceʼ!). The long atmospheric start to ʽStrange Ritualʼ, with its
delayed guitars running ghostly circles around your ears, is something directly
out of Brian Enoʼs textbook — think one of those instrumentals on Another Green World. And so on.
No wonder, then, that if you approach the album
from a position of musical experience, the songs will not look like much of
anything. Worse, even a dude with razor-sharp wit and God-given inspiration
might eventually cease to be interesting if he just keeps making the same artistic
points over and over again — and I cannot promise that this album will let you
know anything about Byrne, the thinking personʼs artist, that you, the thinking
person (you are a thinking person,
right?), have not already known or at least suspected before. But if you want
yourself just a few nifty nuances, and if you want to hear a David Byrne who is
a little unusually more quiet and contemplative than ever before, the record is
worth your while.
The album lives under the shadow of ʽA Long
Time Agoʼ, a sort of jazzy meditation with astral overtones — lots of tricky
guitar lines overloaded with echo effects, against the background of which the
voice of David slowly drifts in space. Curiously, it shares stylistic
similarities with Bends- and OK Computer-era Radiohead, though the
instrumental arrangements are nowhere near as attention-attracting; the overall
message is much the same, though — a sad farewell to the old world and a bit of
discomfort and trepidation at the coming of a new one. Listen hard enough and
it is difficult not to feel pity at the songʼs conclusion — "itʼs only the
singing of the stars, they burned out a long, long time ago...". This is
genuinely the saddest and gloomiest that Byrne ever got, which is not really a
compliment — so far, the guy has always worked best when he was hiding his
depression under a spastic coat of irony and eccentricity, and while taking off
oneʼs mask is always an act of bravery, the end result always has a 50/50
chance of amazing people or severely disappointing them. In this case, the
typical reaction might be relative indifference: we know, really, that melancholic nostalgia and fear of the future
have been two of Byrneʼs primary building blocks for the previous ten years, so
this «coming out» with an explicit confession is, if not totally predictable,
at least somewhat to be expected.
Later on, we learn that "there are no
angels left in America anymore", which does not exactly set your mind
reeling as strongly as it did when the same song was ʽOnce In A Lifetimeʼ. We
get a ʽHeavenʼ-type acoustic ballad where we learn that "weʼre living in a
dump, trying to figure out what sex we are" (no, this is not about transgender issues). We get
that odd ʽI Canʼt Danceʼ clone in which we learn that "the sun shines on
the evil, the sun shines on the good, it doesnʼt favour righteousness, although
you wish it would" and that the protagonist is "going back in the box
again", though, honestly, heʼd never left it in the first place. We have
ʽNothing At Allʼ, a song that begins with the same gloomy bass swoop as Aimee
Mannʼs ʽSave Meʼ would a few years later — totally not a coincidence, because both artistsʼ aesthetics are dangerously
close at this time. We do get a thin thread of romance and sentimentalism, too,
like in the short acoustic ballad ʽMy Love Is Youʼ which sounds exactly like a
Ray Davies trying his hand at bossa nova — but we do get the message that this
cuddly sentimentalism is just one way of alleviating the heroʼs pains and
shutting him off from the outside world.
What we also get, unfortunately, is a sort of
half-assed attitude when it comes to developing and realizing all these ideas.
In a recent appreciation of the late David Bermanʼs Purple Mountains, I was struck by how it was possible to express
such a decided and resolute state of self-ejection from the world through such
friendly and worldly musical means, making you deeply respectful and genuinely
terrified of the artist at once. This album, on the contrary, is not resolute
at all — it meanders, it hobbles around from one shred of musical depression to
another, and even though, fortunately enough, it is not at all self-pitying,
it... well, letʼs just say it sprays its message all around you in faint whiffs
of aerosol, rather than sending it flying like a bullet in your skull. Itʼs not
that Byrneʼs musical muscles have become flabby; it is rather that he has
consciously allowed them to atrophy without thinking of a way to make the best
use of it. Of course, with anybody less talented than Byrne this entire «more
existentialist philosophy, less musical invention» strategy would be aural and
intellectual torture. With Byrne, it is more like «hmm, nice change of
direction, David, but did you really
have to let your hair grow that long
to do it?»
George, something's wrong with how you've posted the image, the right side looks upside down.
ReplyDeleteNope, that's how the album cover looks: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Byrne_(album)
DeleteThem also uploaded wrong way. Must be a bug in the software.
Delete