brainwashed
Home
Brainwashed | Tuesday, 09 February 2010
Advertisement
Steven R. Smith, "Cities" Print E-mail
Written by Lucas Schleicher   
Sunday, 11 October 2009
cover image Steven R. Smith is one of the most fascinating guitarists and writers this country has. Along with talents like Glenn Jones, Jack Rose, and Ben Chasny, he has composed a remarkable and singular body of work grounded in the history and spirit of America (guts and all). After nearly 15 years and well over 30 albums Smith has composed one of his best records yet, one that approaches the greatness of Tableland. Economical and sharply focused, Cities plays out like the soundtrack to humanity's slow and sad funeral.

 

Immune

Steven R. Smith - Cities

I don't mean to suggest that Smith and Jones or Smith and Chasny have all that much in common musically, but they all produce distinctly American sounding music. What they write is married variously to folk and country traditions, the myth of the wild west, or American nature and mysticism. On Cities Smith focuses squarely on nature and myth, with an eye towards the reclamation of land and beauty lost. Beginning with "Cities in Decline," Steven paints a portrait of man as criminal and of nature as judge, jury, and executioner. A shifting drone made from a frayed violin sets the tone for the entire album and for the appearance of a descending guitar melody that imitates the opening song's title. With Smith we descend into a world set ablaze: skyline's burn in the distance, cities become unsafe, and the unsympathetic stillness of the wild offers itself as the only shelter from mankind's dread fate. Of course, it turns out to be a graveyard itself. Smith's style is so sharp and perfectly honed that vivid images jump out of the music and offer themselves instead of laying in wait for an adventurous listener. On Cities the power of impressionism is utilized to its fullest. Bright and clear melodies populate the record, but they are used to contrast the vast swathes of tonal color and smears of texture that make up most of the record. Where singable melodies and familiar song structures emerge, they do so quite strongly and with a great deal of emotional power. "Line to Line, Pole to Pole" is one such instance. The song lasts but a minute, but in that time Smith splits open his record and reveals a fragile beauty full of wonder, remorse, and fractured memory.

As it turns out, much of the album sounds like an imperfectly recalled memory. There are spots on the record where Smith's playing reaches for some unseen apex, but falls short and breaks down. It's as if his fingers can't quite remember what to do or as though they've become weak. On "The City Gate" a violin leads the action, but its typically brilliant tenor is rendered rough and feeble, like it would sound if a child were playing the melody but still learning how to draw the bow across the strings. Misremembered or misplayed phrases appear all over the record, but in a deliberate fashion. In other places, instruments sound distant and uncertain, as though the narrative being told is full of "maybes" and "I believes." And this is what I mean by Smith's playing being especially impressionistic: he's not worried about songs so much as he is about painting a picture or describing a scene. "The Road" is an example of him combining both approaches in the same song. A guitar with nylon strings walks over a simple organ melody and the crackling glimmer of Smith's electric accompaniments. The arrangement imitates the cadence of someone walking or stumbling down a path with a scorched and blistered plain providing the sad setting for this almost pathetic scene. The title and tone recall Cormac McCarthy's novel of the same name and I have to assume Smith is referencing it, even if unconsciously. It would make the perfect soundtrack to that destitute story.

Cities is both painful and pleasant, much in the same way as McCarthy's book. Small victories are won throughout the album, especially where simple beauty and awe burst through all the destruction and distortion. "All is One, One is None, None" closes the album on this note, where a kind of bittersweet reverence is intimated. A half-yelled, half-sung chorus of wordless notes is set beneath a buzzing wave of guitar noise and glinting harmony. As the song fades to nothing, a resigned quietude takes over and the bleak landscapes of Smith's mind appear to silence the possibility of saying anything more. There's no struggle and no pain in the music, just a quiet breath and a small feeling, like standing in the shadow of the world.

samples:


 
< Prev   Next >

Del.icio.us brainwashed
 
 


bing020.jpg
Polls
Which month would you most like to have Brainwaves 2010?
 
Buzz Bin
Concerts and Exhibitions
Brain Menu
Home
News
Reviews
Events
In Depth
Opinions and Editorials
Videos
Free Music
New Releases
FAQs
Meet the Staff
Contact Us
Sponsorship Ads
Main Menu
About Brainwashed
Artists and Archives
Recording Companies
Brainwashed Radio
Podcast
Commerce
Announcement List
Links
Terms and Conditions
Search ALL of Brainwashed
User Menu
Your Details
Submit News
Submit Event
Submit Review
Submit Blog Entry
Submit Link
Check-In My Items
Logout
Administrator
Login Form





Lost Password?
FOLLOW US!
brainwashed@Delicious
brainwashed@Facebook
brainwashed@Flickr
brainwashed@Last.fm
brainwashed@Live Journal
brainwashed@Myspace
brainwashed@Tribe.net
brainwashed@Twitter
brainwashed@YahooGroups
MP3 Blogs
Mutant Sounds
Ezhevika Fields
Rottenmeats
Loki23
meinwalkmanistkaputt
fm-shades
LINK OF THE...
pictureisunrelated
Arcane Detritus
Awkward Boners
Awkward Family Photos
Ambient Synthesizer 606
Brainwaves on Vimeo
Company Cookbook
FREE MP3s
Scratoa! - Live en San Antón part V (Killer Pimp)
Soundpool - But It's So (Killer Pimp)
Ceremony - Someday (Killer Pimp)
James Blackshaw - Cross (Young God)
Tortoise - High Class Slim Came Floatin' In (Thrill Jockey)
Envenomist - The 11th Hour (Killer Pimp)
Aidan Baker & Thisquietarmy - Imagistic Continuity (Killer Pimp)
Dead Letters Spell Out Dead Words - This World Seems Empty Without You (Killer Pimp)
Blood Money - Horizon (Killer Pimp)
LASTFM Brainwashed


Donate towards our web hosting bill!
 

 

© 1996-2010 Brainwashed Inc.