BENT KNEE: SAY SO (2016)
1) Black Tar Water; 2) Leak
Water; 3) Counselor; 4) EVE; 5) Interlude; 6) The Things You Love; 7) Nakami;
8) Commercial; 9) Hands Up; 10) Good Girl.
It is quite surprising to me that I do not love
Bent Knee as much as all the aspects of their music are supposing I should.
Goddangit, this is provocative, experimental stuff, with a huge diversity of
approaches, not afraid of throwing in extra ferocity or a tad more
vulnerability; great singer, challenging melodies that do not, however, make
any serious transgressions against harmony, intelligent lyrics, no blatantly
obvious nods to trendy fashions... but somehow, somewhere, something about it all still isn't right.
For some reason, on their third album, Say So, Courtney Swain and her friends
seem even more distant than they used to be. The music, if anything, gets even
more complex and unpredictable: what can you say about a band that sounds like
King Crimson on one track, sings in Japanese on the next one, and then goes
into a Beyoncé-style R&B workout? And yet, behind all the ambition and the
superficially unquestionable presence of soul, I sense surprisingly little real
feeling — at the very least, I totally fail to connect with any of this stuff emotionally.
My personal hypothesis, which might, perhaps,
seem surprising to other listeners, is that at this point, Swain's vocal
artistry and the band's music not so much complement each other as clash with
each other. The music here is, by and large, experimental: Bent Knee explore
rare time signatures, non-standard instrumental combinations, and genre soups
that could somehow synthesize dark folk, ambient, math-rock, and vaudeville
all in one. However, in this they do not reach the efficiency level of, say,
somebody like the Mothers of Invention, because the music always has to
remember that it serves as the backdrop to Swain's performance — there are very
few pure instrumental passages here, and Swain has such a strong presence that
whenever she sings, it is dang hard to concentrate on the music. And when the
music is experimental, how can one «get it» without concentrating?
On the other hand, Swain all by herself is not quite capable of climbing the golden
pedestal reserved for outstanding female performers. Why, I do not really
understand: she has a great range, she's got some cool word combos at her
disposal, and she has plenty of alluring theatrics in her approach. Yet as time
goes by, it becomes harder and harder for her to stay put in the shoes of Mad
Ophelia without revealing herself as a certified impostor. For me, the album
pretty much crashed from the false start of ʽBlack Tar Waterʼ — like ʽWay Too
Longʼ, it also opens the record with ecological metaphors, but where ʽWay Too
Longʼ worked as an angry rant, ʽBlack Tar Waterʼ gives us broken-hearted
numbness as its chief emotion, and this is a much tougher emotion to tackle. Anger is something that we all
have; true broken-hearted numbness is rare, and even simulating it convincingly
is a task that Courtney Swain struggles with. "I made myself strong / By
getting my skin numb" she sings... and I don't believe her. Likewise,
"I try to speak but I only leak water" on the next track is sung with
a certain enigmatic pretense, but the tonality of that statement seems so
artificial that I am left utterly cold.
The cumulative result is that Say So is a very busy, fussy, pulsating
album, filled to the brim with ideas; but as a challenging musical statement it
falls flat, because there's way too much of the «primadonna factor» in it — and
as a primadonna album, well, there's too much fuss and pulsation in it. I
share Swain's concerns: for the ecology, for the broken-hearted, for the
commercialism and insanity of 21st century life (ʽCommercialʼ), I even appreciate
the irony when the record's most Beyoncé-like song (ʽHands Upʼ) turns out to
be a lyrical condemnation of the cheap thrills of technological progress
("we'll be so progressive darling / solar cell on our roof",
"texts loop like a mantra through me / buzzing blasts of dopamine").
But it is an intellectual conundrum, this record, not a feast for the senses,
and this is not what counts as great music in my own textbook. I even have
trouble talking about individual songs — because it is no fun to praise their
deep conceptuality or complex structures or layered arrangements unless it all
makes emotional sense, and almost none of it does.
But as an example, I will take the album's nine-minute
centerpiece, ʽEVEʼ. It starts out on a cool note — fire alarm-like guitars and
see-sawing violins — then, as the note quickly gets tedious, at 1:40 into the
song the big drums and distorted guitars kick in, but the expected impression
of destruction and chaos never materializes. Why? Because the guitars are not
loud enough, dammit; because there is no feeling that the musicians are really
into this, because these guys have neither the compositional genius of King
Crimson nor the animal drive of, say, Nirvana. In addition, they do not like to
operate in terms of individualistic guitar riffs, so there is no single «line»
anywhere in sight that you could hang on to in order to weather the storm.
Midway through, in one of those rare intervals where the primadonna clams up
for some time, there is another chaotic section, with guitars and violins
frantically accelerating and finally dissolving in a puddle of ambient noise
from which the primadonna is reborn again — see, it might even sound intriguing
on paper, but I'd rather go back to The Velvet Underground for my chaos...
I will not give the album a thumbs down: Bent
Knee is one of the most daring and challenging American rock bands of our time,
and Say So shows no signs of resting
or slacking in those departments. But after the first two records where their
ambitions were still kept in reasonable check, I feel like they may have
overstepped their limits and boundaries — without adding anything fundamentally new to the table, they
have become too entangled in their own cobwebs. But then again, maybe it's just
me, and I never liked Tales From
Topographic Oceans, either; so if you like yourself a good musical
challenge, be my guest; just do not feel surprised when nobody ends up
remembering a single thing about this record in five years' time.
"I will not give the album a thumbs down: Bent Knee is one of the most daring and challenging American rock bands of our time"
ReplyDeleteThanks for reviewing Bent Knee! I've been reading your generally favourable impressions of the last three albums with great interest, but now finding it a little difficult to reconcile the above statement in the context of a release I find as equally challenging as its predecessors. The band's exemplary command of seismic dynamic shifts remains in check (coming across like the bastard lovechild of Tori Amos, Portishead and The Mars Volta) ..... perhaps this band really warrants more listens than the standard 3 review plays you understandably limit yourself to?
In any event, latest album "Land Animal" is somewhat more streamlined and integrated; therefore I get the feeling it may click with you more (ironically, its my least favourite, though still head and shoulders above most everything I listen to today!)
How...
ReplyDeletemany times...
will you reference...
that Yes album?!!