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MUSIC.COM
August 2002
By Wayne Donnelly
CD REVIEW
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Patricia Barber
Verse
Blue Note/Premonition
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Rejoice, Barberites!
(Barberians?) After four long years of waiting, Patricia Barber gives
us her first complete album of original songs (that's right -- no covers
this time) since her 1998 masterpiece Modern Cool. Companion, recorded
live, and the superb standards collection Nightclub have provided welcome
musical nourishment in the meantime, but this writer and many other fans
have been waiting eagerly for this one.
I
got very excited when I saw the title of this CD. No other jazz artist
I know can match PB's sensitivity to and command of language, and the
title Verse promises uncommon and challenging lyrics. The fun begins
right away, with the opening track, "Lost in This Love." Over
a surging bossa nova beat, PB sings:
Where
is the green in the leaf?
Where is the movement in the molecules?
Where is the up in the beat?
Where is the thrill in the chill of the night?
Where is the bee in the sting?
When did the Earth lose circumference?
When did the map lose relief?
Where is the salt in the tear in my eye?
And
it gets even better in subsequent stanzas. Clever wordplay? Absolutely.
But more, too. Allusions to the sciences, to emotion, combined in the
last line, suggest perhaps that the certainties that supported the last
century are not so certain in this new one. I can't say I disagree.
Listening
to "Lost in This Love" and elsewhere I thought about another
favorite, the multimedia/performance artist Laurie Anderson. Although
their artistic end products are unique and quite different, I think
these two share many qualities, beginning with their common penchant
for irony. Each has a remarkably acute ear for the language of our times,
be it of the street, popular media, or literature and philosophy, and
the ability to deconstruct familiar idioms and recombine them so as
to force us to think about them in fresh ways. Both can weave emotion,
intellect and the physical into metaphysical verbal tapestries. (In
"If I Were Blue," PB sings: "if I were blue/like David
Hockney's pool/dive into me and glide/under a California sky/inside
your mouth and nose and eyes am I" -- blue progresses line by line
from mood to color to water -- and in the tradition of metaphysical
poetry, the last line suggests a more transcendent merge.) If you enjoy
working through PB's lyrics here, you may want to check out Anderson's
brilliant Bright Red CD.
But
I digress. I could go on citing the many ways PB interweaves thought
and emotion and physicality, but I'll content myself with just one more.
In "I Could Eat Your Love" (how's that for a double entendre?),
she sings:
I'll
drink remorse like a cabernet
champagne with indecision
guilt like garlic
needs to sauté with cream, butter, and wine
Verse
is a well earned title, for the songs have the elusiveness and allusiveness,
the ambiguity, the command of metaphor, the resonance of meaning, and,
importantly, the sound of poetry. In these times when a teenager with
long hair and a guitar can be dubbed a poet -- even if only by her PR
flack -- it is instructive to be reminded that the real thing does still
exist.
The
sound on Modern Cool is founded on Barber's powerful piano and the authoritative
bass of her longtime colleague Michael Arnopol. That recording has a
deep bass and overall weight that I find very appropriate to the songs
and to PB's smoky vocals. Verse, also recorded by engineer Jim Anderson
with Barber producing, paints a very different sonic picture -- lighter
in texture and somewhat more transparent. On first hearing it, I was
distressed to hear so little piano. PB plays piano on only about half
the songs, sometimes only briefly, and the instrument is mixed much
further back than on Modern Cool. But what there is, is choice. I am
particularly smitten by "If I Were Blue," in which the only
instruments are the piano and Neal Alger's sensitive guitar; the song
closes the album like a hushed benediction. As she did with the Hammond
B3 on Companion, PB here offers some tasty work on the Fender Rhodes.
Arnopol's bass stays mostly in the background this time around.
Dave
Douglas's terse, evocative muted trumpet, so valuable on Modern Cool,
is again featured on Verse. This guy can say a lot with only a few notes,
but when he gets a chance to stretch out -- as in his solo on "I
Could Eat Your Love" -- he dazzles. Alger and drummer Joey Baron
(Eric Montzka on "You Gotta Go Home") are in great form throughout,
and the ensemble work, as usual with PB, is fabulous -- intricate and
imaginative.
I
think the jazz vocal recording of the year has come. For anyone who
is already a Barber fan, buying Verse is a no-brainer -- just save your
pennies until Aug. 27 and go get this baby. But it seems to me that
virtually any reasonably mature music lover -- of jazz, of great singing,
of interesting lyrics or whatever -- can find plenty to enjoy here.
And, if you don't feel like working at the musical poetry, just relax
and -- what else? -- enjoy the music.
Enjoyment:
100
Sound
Quality: 93
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