Bevis Frond
Valedictory Songs
[Woronzow/Rubric]
Rating: 6.9
I was always a bit perplexed by the fact that "lo-fi" was given credence as a
genre. I mean, sure, the layers of tape hiss and analog crust did give lo-fi
music a unique sound. But it seemed to be an utterly superficial distinction,
and one which had little bearing on why I was such a big lo-fi fan for so
long. I mean, Bee Thousand is one of my favorite albums of all time;
it could've been produced by Todd Rundgren for all I care. The songwriting
was the only ingredient necessary.
Notice how much of that is in past tense. The perhaps ill-titled lo-fi genre
has all but disappeared. Just pop in the latest album by Pavement, Sebadoh,
or Guided by Voices for proof. Or the Bevis Frond.
That's right, Valedictory Songs, Nick Saloman's first record on Rubric,
is thoroughly produced-- no hiss, no clipping, no crust. What's more, the record
is Saloman's first studio release in years that includes touring band Andy
Ward and Adrian Shaw, whose instrumentation on last year's live Frond record
proved them more than technically proficient.
When I received Valedictory Songs in the mail, I was hoped desperately
that it would be an album every bit as good as Saloman's last two solo outings
under the Bevis guise, the irrepressibly cool North Circular and
Vavona Burr. Both of these records are testaments to Saloman's sick
talents both as a guitarist and a songwriter, chock full of insanely catchy
melodies, air-tight grooves, and enough heavy riffage to keep a Sabbath fan
satiated.
Saloman also demonstrated a knack for penning compelling organ-driven ballads,
as well as the occasional 10-minute anti-corporation/music critic rant. But
the truly remarkable aspect of Saloman's work to date isn't the ground it's
covered, but the fact that it's been so consistent. Valedictory Songs
doesn't break this mold; it's a fine rock record in every possible sense. Nary
a weak moment to be found, in fact. But it lacks the strong moments, the
backbone of past efforts.
Valedictory Songs finds Saloman in more ballad-heavy territory than on
previous releases. "High on a Downer," "The Speed of Light," and the mid-tempo,
'70s-inspired "Early Riser" certainly tread closer to "monster ballad" status
than anything Saloman has done in the past, due in no small part to the syrupy,
multi-tracked vocals. And while all of the ballads on Valedictory Songs
are undeniably well-written, never succumbing to soppy-ass lyrics, they just
don't have the distinctive edge of other Frond recordings.
The album does have a few damned fine rock songs on it, though. The opener,
"Godsent," chugs along on a typical Saloman guitar riff, beating '70s rock at
its own game. "China Fry" swaggers on a slide-guitar riff and a "you fuckin'
ingrate" chorus that will bring a tear to the eyes of those who miss the days
of T.Rex. As a rock songwriter, Saloman is simply unstoppable. Sadly, the lack
of musical momentum on Valedictory Songs suggests that he may be
slowing down. My suggestion? Take two shrooms and record another album in the
morning.
-Matt LeMay