BROKEN SOCIAL SCENE PRESENTS BRENDAN CANNING: SOMETHING FOR ALL OF US... (2008)
1) Something For All Of Us; 2)
Chameleon; 3) Hit The Wall; 4) Snowballs & Icicles; 5) Churches Under The
Stairs; 6) Love Is New; 7) Antique Bull; 8) All The Best Wooden Toys Come From
Germany; 9) Possible Grenade; 10) Been At It So Long; 11) Take Care, Look Up.
Well, er, I suppose that Brendan Canning
quickly followed up on Kevin Drew's «solo» album with his own one since he
wanted us to insightfully compare his individual artistic vision with that of
his partner. The trouble is, once I'd finished listening to Something For All Of Us..., I forgot absolutely
everything I remembered about Spirit
If..., so, what with this thing about a reviewer's responsibility and all,
I honestly went back to Spirit If...
and gave it another twist. But then it turned out that, by the time the last
song was over, I could not keep in mind even a single thing about Something For All Of Us... So, not
wanting to disappoint my readers, I immersed myself once again in Brendan Canning's
one-and-only solo oeuvre. It was not an unpleasant listen, but, needless to
say, once I finally got down to the review, there was nothing in my head to
compare it with. For some reason, Drew and Canning just couldn't share adjacent
space in my memory cells. It was then that I finally got it — the two guys'
styles are so similar that they act upon each other like two positive charges.
Whatever you do, don't listen to them
in a row. Put some AC/DC in between, or maybe a full CD of didgeridoo soloing.
Anyway, it's too late to be drawing serious
comparisons now, so just a few quick words on whether this «Broken Social
Scene Presents: Brendan Canning» thing has any autonomous value, or if it can
be used to generate awesome epiphanies in the brain, or if we should encourage
the author to develop this style even further. These few quick words, in their
correct order, are: it hasn't, it cannot, and we shouldn't. Nice sound overall,
though.
Apparently, Canning favours a slightly heavier
sound than Drew: there are more distorted guitar parts here, more forceful
percussion rhythms, and the anthem-to-ballad ratio seems a little heavier on
the anthem side. But none of it matters, since most of the anthems are just
straightahead «alt-pop» without any extraordinary melodic content. You know
something is definitely not right
here when the «element of surprise» on the album consists of unexpectedly encountering
a disco bass line on one of the songs (ʽLove Is Newʼ) — as if this decision had
some deep meaning (in reality, most likely, it is just part of the same old
nostalgic trend, where people raised on disco, even if they thought they hated
it when they were in their teens, were still surreptitiously encoded to return
to it twenty or thirty years later).
Of the rest, ʽChurches Under The Stairsʼ has
some funny falsetto awoo-awooing; ʽAll The Best Wooden Toys Come From Germanyʼ
is a short and pretty «ambient-folk» instrumental in the vein of BSS' first
album; ʽPossible Grenadeʼ has a powerful riff-based coda; and that's all, folks
— everything else is non-descript inasmuch as it can all be described by the
small world of formulae long since set in stone. No better and no worse than
the average BSS album, I think that Something
For All Of Us... should be legally sued for moral damage by the word «something»
— and honestly, I'd take something really
wild, offensive, and disgusting, like Ted Nugent, over this sterile-packed «Piece
Of Mass Art For The Progressively Illuminated 21st Century Art Lover» any time
of day. Thumbs
down.
Check "Something For All Of Us" (MP3) on Amazon
Hmm, a lot of thumbs down for these 90s/00s artists that you've been reviewing. Perhaps it's time to nix those paltry decades and dig deeper into the 70s and 80s by covering artists that you never got around to reviewing on your older site. Now that you're in the B section, I say it's time for some Be Bop Deluxe.:)
ReplyDeleteI agree about Be-Bop Deluxe, but while the '00s did suck, the '90s ruled, and it's nice knowing that George is honor-bound to revisit Blur and Björk before long. (And maybe he'll tackle Beck while he's at it.)
DeleteThe 00s were slightly better than the 90s, but that really isn't saying much. Regardless, I hope that George digs deeper into the 70s and 80s this time, and keeps the re-reviews of acts covered on his old site down to a minimum. Other acts he could cover here in the B section include Brian Auger's Oblivion Express, The Boomtown Rats, Bread Love & Dreams, Birth Control, Burnin Red Ivanhoe and Bijelo Dugme.
ReplyDelete"I hope ...."
ReplyDeleteGS' system is to review at the same time one band from each decade, so I think your hope will remain unfulfilled.
Not quite one per decade, as I'm sure you know. There's 1920-1960, 1960-1966, 1967-1970, 1971-1976, 1976-1989, 1989-1998 and 1998-the present and beyond! (Actually the HTML page still says 2010, which, personally, I think is pretty silly).
DeleteSo anyway, my point: George's musical preferences still show through pretty clearly, and he's gonna wind up (has already, obviously) review more 60s and 70s music than 80s, 90s and noughties.
Actually, since many 60s and 70s acts went on releasing music all through the 20th century and beyond, he might end up reviewing more individual albums from the last few decades.
He is not, however, digging deeper than the deepest well, by which I mean that out of Zaragon's potential reviewees the only one I'd put any real hope beyind is The Boomtown Rats. At the very least, I'd pity George if he never got to hear "I Never Loved Eva Braun" in his life. I don't really favour po-mo much, but boy, when it's done that well...