BARENAKED LADIES (AND THE PERSUASIONS): LADIES AND GENTLEMEN (2017)
1) Narrow Streets; 2) Gonna
Walk; 3) Don't Shuffle Me Back; 4) The Old Apartment; 5) Keepin' It Real; 6)
For You; 7) Some Fantastic; 8) Good Times; 9) Odds Are; 10) Sound Of Your
Voice; 11) When I Fall; 12) Maybe Katie; 13) One Week; 14) Four Seconds; 15) I
Can Sing.
Yes, well, okay, this is Barenaked Ladies using
the pretext of performing with the veteran vocal band The Persuasions to
re-record a chunk of their back catalog — or, perhaps, Barenaked Ladies using
the pretext of re-recording a chunk of their back catalog to perform with The
Persuasions. Hell if I know, hell if anybody knows. Why The Persuasions? Well,
apparently a chance meeting with Kevin Hearn led them to appear at a Barenaked
Ladies show in 2016, and supposedly there's been chemistry and all that, and now
we have a lengthy, triumphant title: Ladies
And Gentlemen: Barenaked Ladies And The Persuasions. And we are supposed
to give a damn.
To be honest, I never heard The Persuasions
before — as a strictly a cappella band, they never had much chart success,
despite being put on the map by no less than Frank Zappa himself back in 1968
(come to think of it, maybe that is
why they never had much chart success), and, as far as I can tell, their only
more or less remembered minor hit was 1972's ʽGood Timesʼ, which happens to be
the only Persuasions song covered here, with an entirely new rapped bridge
creeping in midway through. This is probably not a major omission: the guys
predictably generate slick, complex, professional harmonies, devoid of
individuality. Why did Hearn and Robertson decide that utilizing these
harmonies for Barenaked Ladies songs would make a lot of difference?
Well, it is probably not a matter of whether it
is The Persuasions, The Impressions, The Temptations, or The Fornications
(spot the odd one out): it is more a matter of the band expressing a desire to
remake some of its songs in a more consciously retro style. Look at ʽNarrow
Streetsʼ, opening the record: on Silverball,
it opened in the style of classic New Wave, with a post-punkish guitar riff and
a Cars-style organ dominating the sound, whereas here it opens with barbershop
quartet vocals, and the entire arrangement consists of minimalistic bass,
drums, and piano, with the vocals of the Ladies and the Persuasions bearing the
main brunt of the melody, as if this were 1958 all over again or something.
This does not mean that the entire album is going to be that way. Later on, we
get our acoustic and even our electric guitars, and the style is not retro
enough to make them re-write all the melodies in ways that would be appropriate
for the Fifties — for instance, the hard-rocking swagger of ʽKeepin' It Realʼ
is preserved fair and square — but the general idea is clear: to introduce the
old, innocent vibe of the pre-rock era (the «authentic» vibe, that is!) into
music that once used to herald the post-rock vibe (not in the Sigur Rós sense
of the word «post-rock», but rather in the They Might Be Giants / Ween sense of
it, of course).
Does it work? Well, not enough to make me judge
that the action was really worth it. For starters, they could have sure picked
a better setlist: I appreciate that they did not completely focus on the
post-Page era, but on the whole, they picked quite a few boring clunkers —
couldn't they have done ʽBrian Wilsonʼ instead of ʽWhen I Fallʼ, for instance?
For another thing, too many tracks just do not differ that much from the
originals, Persuasions or no Persuasions: much too often, «Ladies and
Gentlemen» just sing in unison with each other (ʽOdds Areʼ), rather than
thinking of more interesting ways — or even labyrinths — to distribute their
collective vocal power. And finally, even when they do get it right (ʽMaybe Katieʼ, etc.), this is not enough to turn
the songs into anything radically different. They were light, friendly,
romantic, and humorous in the first place; spicing them up with soulful /
doo-woppy vocals is, at best, like adding a splash of whipped cream on top of
your icecream cone — most of the time you barely notice it is there.
None of this ain't bad, though. Well, a few of
the songs are, but, fortunately, they did not take a lot of their dreary adult
contemporary ballads (hardly suitable for Persuasions contributions anyway),
so the record is largely listenable all the way through. And I guess that these
days, Barenaked Ladies still get more fans than The Persuasions do, so it
should be counted as a generous gesture towards a hard-working bunch of vocal
veterans who probably deserve better. But clearly this is just a stop-gap
release, another harmless, but expendable oddity in the band's catalog that
will not be remembered. And I have a deep fear that those few reviews for the
album that I have encountered were all positive simply because the critics had
already forgotten how those songs sounded or even where they all came from in
the first place, and simply had fun listening to them all over again; so here's
hoping that Hearn or Robertson do not run into Diana Ross or the remaining Jackson
brothers any time soon, because there's still plenty of backlog tunes left to
rerecord for people with long term memory loss.
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