My third review of the week! Hard to swing it, but I was aided by the fact that this next album is an EP, and so that much quicker to grok in its fullness.
Disc 1779 is…Overboard & Down
Artist: Okkervil River
Year of Release: 2006
What’s up with the Cover? A man lies uncomfortably on a makeshift raft. There are also a lot of hands.
We’ve got some hands in the sky that appear to be summoning good weather and a bit of wind to speed him on his way. We’ve also got our castaway’s own hands, one of which appears to be signaling ‘thank you’ to the sky hands.
Then we’ve got a bunch of hands coming up from under the water. The motivation of these hands is unclear. They don’t look threatening, but I tend to be wary of any hands that rise up out of the ocean depths. I know that’s wrong of me to prejudge these water-dwelling hands, which might be very nice and just patting the man to reassure him that help is on the way. I just think the odds of that are low.
How I Came To Know It: I found this at random while searching for something else at the local record store. I knew Okkervil River quite well but I’d never heard of this record and so, assuming it would be hard to find and I’d regret not buying it later, I snapped it up. I haven’t seen it anywhere since, so I’m glad I did.
How It Stacks Up: I have lots of Okkervil River records, but I decided when I reviewed the Black Sheep Boy Appendix back at Disc 1583 that I would rate their EPs separately. I have (or had) two EPs, and rank “Overboard & Down” at #1 of those two.
Ratings: 3 stars
The internet informs me that this album was put out to support Okkervil River’s 2006 tour of Australia. That’s a cool thing to do, but apart from giving Aussie indie rock fans something to buy at the merch table, how is the music?
Quite solid, thanks for asking. This is vintage early Okkervil River, and singer and principal songwriter Will Sheff’s signature warble is in full effect. Sheff has a delivery that always feels slightly tortured, and he uses it to wring every drop of emotion out of songs that are pretty wrought for the wringing.
“Overboard & Down” is a mix of three new original studio songs (so you’re not just buying it for the cover or the concert memories), a live version of “Westfall” and a Big Star cover. Let’s tackle them in these groupings, shall we?
First the three originals, all of which are solid. “The President’s Dead” is the first track and also the record’s best. Sheff does a great job of capturing such a monumental and tragic event, in this case a mythical president not a reference to an actual event. This is important because the song is less about the event itself and more what it is like to get that kind of news, and all the individual reactions that follow. Best line:
“In the media tent where they spin and they slant,
They just foam the mouth, and they champ at the bit”
Why is that the best line? The correct use of champ at the bit. It is hard to get through my day without some rando saying “chomp at the bit,” with me then being forced to determine if social niceties and circumstance allow me to correct them in the moment. “Chomp” is wrong, people – stop fucking doing it.
But I digress.
Back to the record, after a relatively forgettable but solid “The Room I’m Hiding In” our third original is “Love to a Monster.” It is a powerful example of how Sheff is not afraid to let his songwriting go to very dark places. Here we have a thoroughly despicable narrator describing all his ill-wishes for his ex, right down to reveling in “what a number he did” on her and his plans to do the same to someone new:
“I grow tired of this song turned my eyes to the blonde in the bleachers
She's a lovely young creature I think she's seeking adventure
I think she's ready to see that the world ain't so sweet nor so tender
I won't break her just bend her and make her into my new ringer for you”
Yech. This song makes my skin crawl, but holy crap it does a good job of doing that, and while it is dark and disturbing art, it’s art all the same.
Which brings us to the live version of “Westfall”. The studio version appears on the 2002 album “Don’t Fall In Love With Everyone You See” (reviewed back at Disc 1267). It is a song of horrific murder, and I won’t get into the details (I cover those on the studio review). I will say that this live version is excellent and even more angsty and black than the original. I wouldn’t say I needed another version of “Westfall” but I am glad to have this one all the same.
Rounding out the record is a cover of a song called “O Dana” originally by seventies rock band Big Star. I don’t know much about Big Star but this cover didn’t inspire me to explore them, and overall it is the weakest track on the EP.
“O Dana” aside, “Overboard & Down” is a solid record, and did what a good EP should always do – left me in the mood for more.
Best tracks: The President’s Dead, Love to a Monster, Westfall (live)
1 comment:
I always liked Big Star, but sadly like Deep Purple and Budgie, while they had a lot of promise, their albums never really earned them the big breakout.
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