Heard
Here
Eels
Souljacker
When
I got home at 1:30 in the morning about a week and a half ago, I
saw a package sitting on the stairs with the telltale British postal
stamp. I knew that my copy of the Eels latest album, Souljacker,
had finally arrived. I am, to tell the truth, a little bit obsessed
with this band; hence my ordering a copy off of amazon.co.uk so
I could get it several months before its American release.
Souljacker, like Daisies of the Galaxy and Electro-Shock Blues before
it, is unlike any previous album the band has produced. Whereas
Electro-Shock was a bittersweet piece of therapy where frontman
E dealt with his mother’s death and sister’s suicide,
Daisies was an optimistic, moving-on-but-still-acknowledging-life’s-inherent-sadness
kind of album. Souljacker is a different animal entirely, a snarling,
rocking demonic (yes, I’ll say it) tour de force.
Joining E and drummer Butch on the album are Koool G Murder and
Englishman John Parish. The Eels team on much of the album steps
into the previously-unexplored (for the band, at least) territory
of straight-ahead rock, but still manages to include suped-up versions
of Eels traditional sweet sadness over thumping beats. All the songs
are, of course, supported by E’s brilliant lyrics, at times
beautiful and at times disturbing, but never boring.
The album kicks off with “Dog Faced Boy,” which sets the
general tone of the album: a furious indictment of a cruel and unfair
world, “Dog Faced Boy” at once assaults and energizes
the listener. The theme resurfaces again on the next track, “That’s
Not Really Funny,” and again on “Souljacker Part I,”
which deals with happy stuff like serial murder and incest. The
album title, by the way, comes from an American serial killer from
the early 1990s who claimed to steal the souls of his victims. Neat.
“Jungle Telegraph” also deals with the fun topic of forced
underage prostitution and, well, shit. With jangling guitars and
three layers of rhythm, interspersed with feedback horns, though,
it manages to rock right through and with the rather bizarre lyrical
stylings.
The true gem of the album, though, is the third track, “Fresh
Feeling.” The most life-affirming of any song on the record,
the main orchestration is a sample from “Selective Memory,”
a song off Daisies of the Galaxy. Over soaring strings, maracas
and a brilliant bass beat, E manages to sing “Words can’t
be that strong/ My heart is reeling/ This is that fresh / That fresh
feeling,” and not only mean it but have it work.
The band is recognizable as the same Eels of previous albums on
“World of Shit,” which is of course more uplifting than
both its lyrics and downbeat orchestration, and again on “Souljacker
part II,” both songs featuring the low-fi melancholy that E
has been putting out for more than a decade now. But Souljacker
still manages to finish in a new way. Whereas previous albums invariably
ended with upbeat optimism, “What Is This Note?” ends
Souljacker with the greatest cruelty this world is capable of: the
cruelty of middle-schoolers. The title is not in any way related
to the song’s other lyrics, except as a response: the song
itself is the note in question, a love note from one kid to another.
E’s screamed and barely recognizable singing on the track finishes
Souljacker on the same ass-kicking and disturbing note on which
it begins. The album articulates in greater detail the awfulness
of so much of the world than any of Eels’ previous efforts,
but still manages to provide some –– if not much ––
room for hope and happiness.
-Jacob
Kramer-Duffield
Sense
Field
Tonight and Forever
I
have never really understood this whole “emo” thing.
Thus, most of what follows is essentially the result of ignorance,
snobbery and a shortsighted prejudice against anything that is wimpy
without resolve. It’s really not a big deal. While I’ve
heard from several reliable sources that this ever-popular musical
phenomena can actually appear in many deceptively similar, and equally-perplexing
forms, I have always used the term “emo” simply to describe
a strange, obsessively formulaic sub-genre of sentimental vanilla-rock
crafted by 30-year old ex-punks who like to sniff glue and cuddle.
If the current drug-free incarnation of David Crosby were thin tattooed,
and just a little more self-righteous, that image would epitomize
my crude simplification of the glorious “emo” movement.
But seriously, a veritable army of wide-eyed pretty man-childs (who
love their girlfriends almost as much as their mothers) has established
a terrifying tradition that stretches amiably from the vintage Brit-pop
imitations of Sunny Day, to the contemporary J. Crew punk regurgitations
of Saves the Day. Indeed, from under the stale hum of a million
ill-tuned Gibsons, one can hear the uplifting, ethereal yelp of
a million choirboy voices extolling the virtues of adolescent love,
truth and social harmony to the faithful masses. Oh no. Run for
your lives.
To make matters worse, the group Sense Field, a formidable “emo”
giant, has released a new album thoughtfully titled Tonight and
Forever. Cashing on the same quiet-loud drones, pedantic lyrics
and operatic vocal stylings that have always given grizzled punks
cause to weep openly into tightly-clutched cans of Black Label,
Sense Field’s most recent aural offense is a hideous amalgam
of cringe-worthy pretension, yawn-inducing musicianship and grotesque
melodrama. The song structures are boring, boring, boring. I liked
it much better when Nirvana did it with passion, freshness, nuance
and drugs ten years ago. Furthermore, the lyrics are the most pathetic
collection of lame romantic catch phrases I have ever heard uttered
from the lips of a so-called rock singer. Morrissey makes these
guys look like a floral arrangement.
They’re not enraged, they’re concerned.
They’re not frustrated, they’re confused.
They’re not sensitive, they’re sentimental.
Most importantly, I’ve come to the conclusion that Sense Field’s
biggest problem is that they have no capacity for irony. Sense Field
wants simply to be wholly inspiring, profound and beautiful: a chest-thumping
crew of little Thomas Mertons. How irritating. Instead, they have
accomplished their goal of having no subtext, no complexity and
no structural integrity. So this week, spark up a doob and listen
to something else. I heard that the new Juvenile joint was pretty
hype.
-Andrew Simmons
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