I’m tired and a little stressed
but I’m reviewing this album anyway because music is my salve. Also, I want to
listen to something else tomorrow, and the Odyssey is a harsh mistress: I don’t
get to move on until the review is in the books.
Disc 959 is….March 16-20, 1992
Artist: Uncle
Tupelo
Year of Release: 1992
What’s up with the Cover? I’m not entirely sure, but I
don’t like it. I think it is some rusted out old barrel or box or something.
Maybe it is supposed to represent the “rust belt” of the American mid-west.
That would go thematically with a lot of the songs, but doesn’t make the cover
any better.
How I Came To Know It: My friend Brennan introduced me
to the band and this is just my latest foray into their back catalogue.
How It Stacks Up: I have three Uncle Tupelo albums. “No
Depression” (reviewed back at Disc 867) is easily the best, but the other
two are pretty close. I’ll put “March 16-20, 1992” in second for now.
Ratings: 3 stars
“March
14-20, 1992” is Uncle Tupelo at their most folksy, an album that represents
indie rock ten years before they called it that. Back in the day they called it
“alternative.” I guess every generation has its own word for hard-to-categorize
music, maybe so they can feel like they invented the idea.
The
record (which I’m going to call “March” because…really, we get that you
recorded it in a week) relies heavily on acoustic arrangements. It has an old
timey feel that evokes a thirties religious revival show as much as it does a
nineties protest. I like the way it feels like it comes from a simpler time and
lets some of the best parts of Uncle Tupelo (their ability to write subtle and
soothing melodies) shine through easier. In fact, I would have been happy to
have this production applied to their first two albums more often.
Just like
a folk album, the boys cover a lot of old traditional songs. The best of these
are “Coalminers” and “Lilli Schull.” “Coalminers” is a union protest song about working for the company
for a pittance and struggling to get ahead. “Lilli Schull” is a slow and mournful song about a murder. It is full
of disturbing imagery of a man committing a heinous crime, and thinking back on
the grisly details as he awaits the hangman’s noose. Both songs are reminders that
folk music has never shied away from the hardest topics, long before rock and
roll ever took up the mantle.
Other
songs like “Atomic Power,” a cover of
a 1946 Buchanan Brothers song do not age so well. The novelty of nuclear destruction
is long gone, and other songs have covered the same material better in the
intervening years. Also, the song suggests some old time religion will get you
through the holocaust, which isn’t much of a solution to the burgeoning Cold
War. Maybe less thinking about what comes after we’ve all murdered each other
and a bit more thinking about how the hell we’re going to prevent it.
So what
about the original stuff? It is pretty solid, although I tended to prefer the
tracks where Jay Farrar sings lead. The best of the originals is “Moonshiner,” a sad song with a beautiful
guitar strum and the story of a man being slowly destroyed by alcohol. The
title suggests the man’s occupation is making the booze but the song quickly
makes it clear that being a drunk is as far as it goes, and for this poor soul,
as far as it is ever going to go. Lines like:
“Let me eat when I'm hungry
Let me drink when I'm dry
Two dollars when I'm hard up
Religion when I die
The whole world is a bottle
And life is but a dram
When the bottle gets empty
Lord, it sure ain't worth a damn”
Showcase
how Uncle Tupelo have learned the stark lessons from those early standards they
recorded, and are able to put a fresh and modern twist on the same old demons to
make them their own.
Despite
all this good stuff, the album feels self-indulgent in places, and it feels at
times like the band is trying so hard to be authentic they lose the plot. Songs
like “Grindstone” and “Criminals” are OK, but they seem to be
pushing themselves on me, rather than landing naturally. The instrumental “Sandusky” is pretty enough, but in order for it to hold my attention for the 3:44 it requests I think it needs...words.
The
worst part is the five bonus tracks at the end, which combine to add almost 20
minutes to my version of the record. Three are just live versions of tracks I’d
already heard that just didn’t sound all that different, and one of those (“Moonshiner”) is marred by an extra two
minute “hidden track” of the band playing the theme from “The Waltons.” No,
Uncle Tupelo, this is not nearly as much silly fun as you think it is. There is
also a cover of the Stooges’ “I Wanna Be
Your Dog” which has a nice original sound, but isn’t interesting enough to warrant
a place on the record. Know when to say when.
Overall,
still a strong album, though, and one I’m glad to have in my collection, even
if just for the five or six standout songs.
Best
tracks: Coalminers,
Shaky Ground, Moonshiner, Lilli Schull, Wipe the Clock
No comments:
Post a Comment