BONNIE RAITT: SILVER LINING (2002)
1) Fools Game; 2) I Can't Help
You Now; 3) Silver Lining; 4) Time Of Our Lives; 5) Gnawin' On It; 6) Monkey
Business; 7) Wherever You May Be; 8) Valley Of Pain; 9) Hear Me Lord; 10) No
Gettin' Over You; 11) Back Around; 12) Wounded Heart.
«Raitt's
singing has never been more finely tuned, especially on... the final track, ʽWounded
Heartʼ, a breathtaking duet recorded in one take with keyboardist Benmont
Tench; after nailing it, Raitt reportedly fled the studio, moved to tears; any
second attempt proved both undoable and unnecessary» (Robert L. Doerschuk,
All-Music Guide; I have not been able to find additional confirmation, but no
clear reason to disbelieve the story).
This pretty much
tells us all we need to know, because ʽWounded Heartʼ, a piano ballad written
by contemporary singer-songwriter Jude Johnstone (who also included it on her
own debut album which came out twenty days after Silver Lining), is the very definition of «trivial»: the entire
song rides on exactly one endlessly repeated and not particularly fresh (to say
the least) musical phrase, and the lyrics go like this: "If you listen you
can hear the angels' wings / Up above our heads so near they are hovering /
Waiting to reach out for love when it falls apart / When it cannot rise above
a wounded heart". You could pardon bad wording if it were set to glorious
music, or you could pardon the boring music if it were accompanying brilliantly
stringed verbal phrasing, but damn, this is bad
— generic, corny singer-songwriter fluff that doesn't even begin to approach
the level of some of Bonnie's old ballads like ʽLouiseʼ, let alone any really high standards of ballad writing.
ʽWounded Heartʼ? More like ʽWooden Heartʼ if you ask me.
In other words,
the relative «comeback» that she had with Fundamental
has pretty much ended, as we see Ms. Raitt return to the comfortable territory
of soft-rock / adult contemporary. The entire album consists of bland ballads,
limp rockers with a funky underbelly but no energy whatsoever, and
somnambulant folk-pop, completely devoid of hooks, fresh ideas, or
individuality. The miriad of players and contributing songwriters are
completely unrecognizable to me — seeing as how I have little interest in this
particular marketline — and not a single song here stimulates me into getting
to know any one of them better (I did skim through a couple tracks off that
debut album by Jude Johnston — my bad).
In the middle of
it all, though, unexpectedly comes ʽGnawin' On Itʼ, a blues-rocker with a
dirty, distorted rhythm track reminiscent of Paul Burlison's playing in the
Johnny Burnette trio — in other words, a real good sound as compared to everything else on this flaccid affair,
and in order to match it, Bonnie digs deep and recovers some of her trademark
gritty huskiness. The slide work on the track is also good and merges fine with
Steve Berlin's sax — what I'm a-guessin' is that Los Lobos had their hand here,
as well as Roy Rogers, a fine guitar player who had first made his name with
John Lee Hooker in the 1980s... well, all right, some people with a sense of taste actually were involved in the making of this record. Too bad they only made one track sound like it had a decent
pair of musical balls attached.
Do not get me
wrong: softness, tenderness, emotionality, sensitivity, vulnerability are all
very much welcome on a Bonnie Raitt record, or on anybody else's record — as
long as they go hand in hand with some melodic or vocal move that is at least
remotely interesting, unlike the dissipated atmospheric phrasing of, say, the
title track, which combines a hell of a lot of different string, keyboard, and
percussion instruments into a melting pot where they never come together into
anything coherent or more-than-superficially-pretty. Worse still, many of these
songs try to rock (ʽFools Gameʼ,
ʽMonkey Businessʼ) — but why would you want to listen to Bonnie Raitt going middle-of-the-road
funky, when you can listen to, say, Prince going all the way? What would you be — afraid to enjoy somebody going all the way? Maybe that is what
«adult contemporary» is all about — people too scared to turn their emotional
stove up all the way, or it might, you know, blow up and hurt somebody.
Total thumbs down — and I am not taking that pun-based hint from the match between the album
title and the «silver lining» foxily flashing out of the ongoing general
redness of the lady's hair. If this is her way of communicating to us that one
need not be afraid of aging, and that aging only brings on more wisdom and a
sharpened sense of responsibility (towards one's fans, for instance), I'll opt
for a whole load of irresponsible stupidity instead.
"What would you be — afraid to enjoy somebody going all the way? Maybe that is what «adult contemporary» is all about — people too scared to turn their emotional stove up all the way."
ReplyDeleteCapt. Marvel aka Ryan Atkinson made once a similar remark - he got snarky about people contemplating the risky step from The Carpenters to Bread or something similar. Sure enough Wikipedia puts both in the category of adult contemporary too.