To his
credit, Bob clearly does not give a shit and is very content to put out the next
batch of songs as they come to him, but for the GBV name, the goodwill earned
by comeback LP #1 could slip if quality control measures were not effected.
And really, how could they top that swell
"first" album a mere six months later and where would it ultimately sit in the band's Moby Dick sized
catalogue?
Removing all such doubts, Class Clown Spots A UFO ultimately proves that Pollard & Co. are now a functioning unit. Not content
to sit back and rest their scissor kickers, striped pants and livers for
a few summer live dates, the band issued itself the challenge of
making the (albeit smallish) world so soon again care about another batch of songs. And we do. We really do. Class Clown Spots a UFO leads
with a haymaker and is expertly paced throughout with rafter-reaching anthems,
short, sharp ballads & fewer than ever proggy smoke breaks.
Guided By Voices: Abusing lite beer for 2 solid decades |
At this point, GBV is a lean,
veteran indie rock machine and on CC delivers a perfect balance of joyous resilience and engaging quiet moments.
The exhilarating, Who-styled opener
"He Rises! (Our Union Bellboy)" is the finest new classic-era song
yet: rolling toms and a familiar Pollard minor chord chime give way to Mitch Mitchell's power chords setting-up a
triumphant, roaring close. It's the game Pollard perfected with "Goldheart Mountaintop Queen Directory" and "Don't Stop Now" but really
never better than here. The last minute of this killer kick-off track is
brilliantly cocky - King Pollard walking down from the mountaintop firing
melody bolts off with in every direction.
Next up, the band stomps through the
power chorded "Blue Babbleships Bay" with Pollard in full Paul
Rodgers mode (as heard on classic b-side "Break Even" & Propeller's
"Weed King") followed by Tobin Sprout easing the pace with the
hypnotic crawler "Forever Until It Breaks", a sentiment which seems
to sum up this stage in the band's career - we are here til it don't work no more.
Song 4 is the title track (their
best title track ever?): an exuberant, 2 beers to the sky, straight-up powerpop killer. Originally entitled "Crocker's Favorite Song", a murkier,
lo-fi version was recorded and shelved in the early 90s, fittingly appearing on
the 3-record re-issue of the classic Bee Thousand a few years back.
Pollard has done this a couple of times recently ("A Good Circuitry
Soldier" was a suitcased demo brought to life in 2009 by his swell Boston
Spaceships) and could presumably do this all day - sift through the sock drawer
and pull out straight-to-the-encore ditties. The invigorated comeback spirit
has tellingly transformed a sad song of uncertainty into an anthem of hope.
Drum major Kevin Fennell leads the band and the sing along chorus lets us
know "you never never can go down". Great stuff.
There really are no tracks to skip
over. Tobin Sprout again proves the perfect foil to the colossal Pollard sound
throughout CC. The drum machine
and fake strings of "Starfire" cool out the jam along with the soothing jangle of the stellar
"All of This Will Go". Tobe's melodicism is vastly understated, even
within his own songs! If hooks were elastics, Tobe pulls long and holds steady
while Pollard snaps you in the face and quickly pulls back and snaps you again.
The two come together in the appropriately propulsive "Keep It In
Motion"; a crackling synth-pop ditty with Tobe echoing Bob's lines. It works
wonderfully which begs the question - why don't they sing together more?! It works!
Comparing briefly CC to last
season's Let's Go Eat the Factory, the rockers are catchier and more
fun: "Hang Up and Try Again" is built for the live show - a snake and
ladder stop and start riff topped with distorted vocals, "Roll of The
Dice, Kick In The Head" is a 46-second Mersey beat gem followed by the
superb "Billy Wire", a fiery melodic bruiser complete with bizarro parlor
piano break/bridge and ah ah ahs over the fade out. Spot on. "Jon
the Croc" is another of the louder highlights with Pollard refraining
"let him cry like a crocodile around you now" over a full-on guitar
grind and thunderous rhythm section. Not coincidentally, CC is overall a better produced record than LGETF
- the time together has strengthened the band's sound and they've captured
better takes. The guitars are cleaner and brighter and the snare drum lands
every punch.
For all of the fun and diversity, an
absolute star here is Bob's striking "Be Impeccable", a longish
(almost 3 minutes!) and plaintive lo-fi guitar and vocal ballad where he sings
"be what you are, be impeccable, the untrackable star / I'll shine my
flashlight to where you are". What he has done is turn the flashlight on
himself, on his band, on their lives. The honesty of age. Essentially this is
the spirit that infuses these songs with life and is responsible for making this album such a success - it is straightforward and honest. Themes of perseverance and hope run throughout CC
in the lyrics and in the immediacy of the performances. These are familiar rock
n roll themes and certainly not groundbreaking but good advice always sounds
better from someone with experience. And rock n roll doesn’t get much better
than this. I'll drink to that.
I do not know anything about music but this is an interesting article and the cleverest title ever!
ReplyDelete