BENJAMIN CLEMENTINE: AT LEAST FOR NOW (2015)
1) Winston Churchill's Boy; 2)
Then I Heard A Bachelor's Cry; 3) London; 4) Adios; 5)
St.-Clementine-On-Tea-And-Croissants; 6) Nemesis; 7) The People And I; 8)
Condolence; 9) Cornerstone; 10) Quiver A Little; 11) Gone.
I suppose that the circle of people who have actually
heard about Benjamin Clementine remains fairly small these days — but so many
of those who have heard about him
seem to have fallen under a potent magic spell that the amount of adulation is
almost unsettling. You can easily get a taste of it on his Wikipedia page: how
he suffered bullying at school, how he spent all his days reading books and
memorizing archaic words, how he spent years busking on Paris streets and
building up his self-confidence, how he injured his elbow when shooting a video
in 2014, and how he cut his finger open but still went on playing at a recent
concert (Pete Townshend, eat your heart out — nobody threw you any tissues from the audience!). The endless gushing from fans
and critics alike almost makes you wonder if it is not all a matter of
political correctness: after all, here might be just the figure that highbrow liberal intellectuals have been
desperately looking for all these past years — the Genuinely Intellectual Black
Musical Artist, building upon the foundations of True Culture, rather than the
usual smelly hip-hopper. He may be a shitty poseur for all we care, but as long
as he's banging the piano, singing an actual vocal melody, and paraphrasing
Winston Churchill, he's okay, right? The big black hope for the little white
man.
Well, you know what? I am certainly not the one
to bow down before the altar of PC, but I sincerely like this guy... at least
for now, which, incidentally, happens to be the title of his first LP (so if
the second one turns out to be a piece of shit, at least he's got some sort of
cop-out). As far as the touchy racial issue is concerned, Benjamin Clementine
can be excused out of it: he was born in London, he was largely raised on
English poetry, he had most of his cultural upbringing in France, and although
his voice is certainly «black», and his playing and singing style are seriously
influenced by jazz and soul music, none of his songs are specifically
«African» (only recently, he chided an unfortunate interviewer for mentioning
the «big African choruses» of his songs, by correctly retorting that «African
chorus» makes about as much sense as an «English chorus»). He is most typically
compared to Nina Simone these days, almost as if he were her male reincarnation;
these comparisons do make sense, but Clementine is not a powerhouse like Nina —
his songs may meander and ramble like Nina's, to some degree, yet he mostly
gets by by means of subtlety and symbolism rather than fire and mesmerism.
Although Clementine's compositions usually
follow the verse-(bridge)-chorus structure, his free-form vocal modulation and
complex phrasing, where the melody often has to fit the lyrics rather than vice
versa, bring him closer to experimental vocal jazz; on the other hand, some of
the tracks clearly reveal a big French influence — all those years of Paris
busking clearly left an imprint, as sometimes he comes off as an exquisite
English reply to Jacques Brel. His piano playing is never particularly
virtuosic, but, like Nina, he knows how to use the instrument well: the very
first chords of ʽWinston Churchill's Boyʼ, beethovenly melancholic and
contemplative, might make you pay attention before the vocals even come in, and
his little waltz intros and disturbingly flapped arpeggios are light, tasteful,
and, as hard as it is to justify this, sound like the real thing compared to, say, Alicia Keys or so many other
piano-based singer-songwriters who either just directly rip off the classical
composers they practiced in school or rely on the supreme might of the bombastic
power chord (because, you know, the harder you bang your piano, the stronger it
resonates in your followers' young hearts).
Benjamin's backing band is small (just a basic
drums-and-bass rhythm section), but the album does not sound stripped down at all:
they play loud and forceful enough to give the songs an epic feel whenever
necessary, and when that happens to be not enough, we have an uncredited string
section come in for extra support. Note that there is no guitar whatsoever —
and, although electronic keyboards are used on a couple of tracks, no signs of
kowtowing to the electronic craze, either, which is not necessarily a plus in general, but is a sign of class for this
album in particular: Benjamin clearly knows what he needs to construct his atmosphere,
and he is not pandering to anybody else's tastes so as to compromise it.
Of course, that atmosphere is nothing
particularly new — we all know the average mindset of the lonesome
singer-songwriter, a deeply sensitive and vulnerable soul caught up in a cruel
and careless world. "I am alone in a box of stone / They claim they loved
me but they're all lying" (ʽCornerstoneʼ) — one of the more revealing
(and, some might say, more corny) lines in his usually more inscrutable poetry
— is a good example, and somehow, when he delivers it, I do not get the
proverbial intuitive «spoiled young brat» feeling. Maybe it is some hidden
property of his voice, a weird synthesis of the black soul singer with the
Europop lonesome-romantic tradition that stretches all the way from Bryan
Ferry to Antony Hegarty. Maybe it is the 19th-century inspired piano sonata
bits. Maybe it is simply the context, an unusual freshness of the musical
approach, all the more weird because it is so deeply rooted in the past rather
than looking to the future. Most likely, it's a combination of all that and
then some.
Benjamin sings almost exclusively about
himself, consciously refraining from any sweeping social statements — this, by
the way, is perhaps his biggest difference from the ever-righteous Nina Simone
— and that may be both his biggest advantage and his biggest flaw: advantage,
because that way he can vouch for the utmost sincerity and honesty of every
song and we cannot do anything about it, and flaw, because it might give rise
to accusations of narcissism and undeserved self-aggrandizing. The very first
song, ʽWinston Churchill's Boyʼ, announces his arrival in humbly grand fashion:
"One day this boy will be fine / Better watch out now, this day might be
today!", along with subtle complaints about parental and social pressures.
But hey, the good thing about music is that music can be about anyone — even if
you think that the gentleman might sometimes be overstating his issues, as long
as he has the guts, chops, and inspiration to overstate them, there will always
be people in this world to whom these issues might be even more relevant than
to himself. Why, who knows? "this boy" might even be you!
Although most of the songs set pretty much the
same melancholic-meandering mood, I would not exactly call them «hookless» in
any sense of the word — rather, Clementine is just busy spinning passionate,
slightly theatrical, monologs that have their logical developments and
climactic moments. "London, London, London is calling you" (ʽLondonʼ),
for instance, is one such moment, or the insistent "the decision is mine,
the decision is mine" bit on ʽAdiosʼ, or the ecstatic "Nemesis is a
matter of karma!" coda of ʽNemesisʼ (where he shows off his ability to
link Greek and Indian philosophy in a single sentence), or the way that the
structurally unremarkable dramatic monolog of ʽQuiver A Littleʼ still manages
to find a perfect resolution as the singer decides to "quiver a little —
then burst in laughter" at his discovery of people's hypocrisy. All these
little points hit hard, though sometimes not upon first listen.
Speaking of flaws, a bit of a sense of humor
couldn't have hurt: Benjamin is no stranger to irony and sarcasm (the song
title ʽWinston Churchill's Boyʼ alone proves that), but the only genuinely
«humorous» bit on the album is the brief a cappella interlude
ʽSt.-Clementine-On-Tea-And-Croissantsʼ, poking a bit of fun at Benjamin's
penniless existence in Paris — and even that one is still tied to the issue of
parental relationships ("where is your son, where did he go?"). This
is no big problem for the album as such, but it might be a warning for the
future: one-sidedness and monotonousness is one of the most usual and
irritating problems about even the super-talented artists of today, and
experience shows that it tends to get worse with time unless you pay some
serious attention to it, so "this boy" really has to watch it.
Even so, even if At Least For Now happens to become Clementine's first-and-best
record and the man's talents turn out to be insufficient to expand on it, this
here is one LP that fully deserved its Mercury Prize (a far more tasteful award
these years than the Ed Sheeran-loving, Mumford-&-sons-craving Brits).
Because even if you happen not to be emotionally moved by it — and this is a
fair enough possibility, given that Clementine's subtlety can be easily
mistaken for boredom — there is no denying his unusual craft, his vocal gift,
his literacy, and his odd concoction of European and American influences. If
he has not fully succeeded in forging his own musical genre from those
influences (and some might say that he has), it is probably not his fault —
more like the fault of his parents who conceived him about 20-30 years too late
for that. If he has been overrated by gushing musical critics for socio-racial
reasons (and many might say that he has not), it is not his fault either — more
like, again, the fault of his parents who conceived him about 20-30 years too
early, before the modern world has completed its next cycle of population
adjustment. So just make a bit of a chronological correction here, and join me
in this whole-hearted thumbs up rating.
Soon, oh so soon, this will be dated as your favorite 86/87 album. Too affectionate, too many artificial rhythms, too many sweet piano, too plastic.
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