I’m on a bit of a cold streak,
ratings-wise on the CD Odyssey. This next entry marks the third straight two
star review.
Disc 642 is….So Beautiful or So What
Artist: Paul
Simon
Year of Release: 2011
What’s up with the Cover? This is a picture
by Sven Geier called “DNA Mutation” which is as descriptive a title as any. It
goes well with the album’s title as well as the themes of many of the songs,
which delve into the mysteries of life and afterlife. Either that or Paul Simon
really likes the X-Men. I’m more of an Avengers guy myself.
How I Came To Know It: Sheila bought this for me back
when it came out. It received good critical reviews at the time. Certainly better that I'm about to give it.
How It Stacks Up: My Paul Simon collection is woefully inadequate,
consisting of a Greatest Hits album, Graceland and two of his more recent
records, including this one. Of those three studio albums, I’d put this one
third.
Rating: 2 stars, but almost 3
Paul Simon has never forgotten the
lessons he learned about rhythm when he made "Graceland". “So
Beautiful or So What” shows him continuing to make interesting musical choices.
While the results are hit and miss, I admire him for continuing to find ways to
keep his brand of folk-pop interesting and up to date.
My guitar teacher often reminds me
that the guitar is also a percussion instrument, and Simon clearly understands
how to use it as one on this record. “Getting Ready for Christmas Day” and “The
Afterlife” both jump to life in large part because of the interesting strumming
patterns and textured guitar playing.
For the most part I enjoyed the
album’s focus on varying the rhythm, although I learned that it isn’t for all
occasions. I was at the gym trying to squeeze in one more listen before writing
this review, but the odd time signatures are not good when running on a treadmill.
Simon’s voice was very pretty on
this record. You’d never know he was pushing seventy based on how pure his tone
is. Like all good songwriters, he knows how to write songs that are in his
wheelhouse vocally as well.
The album’s overarching theme is
the exploration of the nature’s mysteries. Unfortunately, Simon opts for
flippant musings on the nature of the universe, or falls back on stock religious
answers. He skirts around most of the hard stuff, and settles for whimsical
stories about what the afterlife might be like. It’s like he wrote some of these
songs for his grandchildren, and they have a ‘story-time’ quality that I found
a bit condescending.
“Rewrite” is a nice break from
this approach, which is a song that muses about how we would’ve done
things differently at key moments in our life. Like a lot of the album, the
song is fairly gentle in its approach, and you get the sense that there is
always room for a ‘rewrite’ of some decisions before we’re out of time.
The second half of the album slows
down considerably, and become more 'easy listening' than folk or pop. The
songs are pretty enough, but they didn’t grab me and it felt like the album was
dragging itself to the finish line.
Because of the musical quality on
the album and a few high points I’m going to keep this album, but it didn’t
overwhelm me.
I’d like to see this record mashed
up with Megadeth’s “So Far, So Good, So What” (reviewed way back at Disc 108). That’s another record that is musically promising, hit and miss in terms
of the songs. Together it would make one strong album – and just think of the
tour! It would be worth going just to see the two groups of fans mingling in the parking lot before the show.
1 comment:
I couldn't agree more with your assessment of this album! After seeing a really phenomenal performance of Rewrite on SNL I was prepared to absolutely love this. I was pretty disappointed, particularly by the triteness of some of the lyrics as you pointed out. It's always nice to find someone to agree with on the internet!
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