WayBack Wednesday - New stuff done in an old manner
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Another superb effort from Mr. Mellencamp. He has never been one to disappoint, and this is no different.
A solid listen from beginning to end by an artist who respects the music and those who came before...
(Rolling Stone) -- John Mellencamp's 25th album, "No Better Than This," continues the thread of American archaeology that he began on "Trouble No More," a self-produced 2003 set of traditional songs and covers. But where "Trouble" was a first brush with history -- Mellencamp trying to make it come to him -- here he meets that history on its home ground.
A set of old-school originals recorded in resonant settings (Sun Studio in Memphis; the First African Baptist Church in Savannah; a hotel room in San Antonio where Robert Johnson cut some classic sides), "No Better" shows Mellencamp channeling spirits and stepping into period styles. They fit him perfectly.
Producer T Bone Burnett rides shotgun, and the duo keep it simple: an old Ampex reel-to-reel tape recorder, a single vintage ribbon mic, a small group of empathetic players. They include ex-Tom Waits guitarist Mark Ribot; Jay Bellerose, whose rhythms shaped Robert Plant and Alison Krauss' Raising Sand; and stand-up bassist David Roe, who played with Johnny Cash at the end of his life.
Mellencamp's songs show a writer still on a hot streak after 2008's Burnett-produced "Life, Death, Love and Freedom," arguably the singer-songwriter's best LP since his 80s heyday. He shoots for timeless here: Aside from an allusion to an answering machine on the Woody Guthrie-style "Thinking About You," these songs could have all been written 50 years ago or more.
"Save Some Time to Dream" is a gentle folk sermon with a dash of existential doubt. The swinging "Right Behind Me" considers Jesus and the devil -- "both inside of me/All the time" -- with Miriam Sturm's jazzy Hot Club fiddle.
Considering the title, Mellencamp has made a remarkably dark record. "No One Cares About Me" is about a guy out of work, ditched by his wife, mourning a father, a son and his only friend, over an old-timey hillbilly strut. The lead character in "A Graceful Fall," a stumpy waltz, is also penniless, "sick of life" and pondering the afterlife, "if there is really one." The dude in "Each Day of Sorrow" insists he would kill himself "if I weren't so afraid."
But as usual, Mellencamp is at his best when he turns hardscrabble struggle into damn-the-torpedoes rock & roll. On the title track, a classic Sun Records "boom-chick-boom" romp, Mellencamp runs through a list of fantasies, some quite reasonable, before concluding that "it won't get no better than this" -- however relatively [expletive]-up "this" might be. Welcome to life in 21st-century America, ladies and gentlemen: Let's party like it's 1929.
"No Better Than This" isn't a perfectly honed set. But Mellencamp has never sounded looser or easier on a record. The most indelible moments are straight-up funny. "Love at First Sight" imagines a relationship from back-seat grope through marriage, kids and subsequent disasters, before deciding it might be better to go home alone. And on "Easter Eve," a man and his 14-year-old son get hassled in a cafe, slash a [expletive] up, get thrown in jail, then walk off with the dude's grateful wife. It's musical storytelling for hard times: far-fetched, violent, sexy, played for laughs. It doesn't get more timeless, or American, than that.
Copyright © 2010 Rolling Stone.




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Comments (9)
The guy is a crank dude -- but cranky in a good way. You can kill me, but I think he is more vital over the past 20 years than Springsteen. I listen to his never stuff way more than latter-day Bruc.
No homicide here - I understand where you are coming from...
They are both icons in their own right
oddly enough....I'm not a big fan...though more than one person has told me i'd like his more recent work. I guess for someone who started out as shallow as a shadow he's gained a certain gravitas with age.
evolution
yeah huh? cool. My all-time favorite track by Mr M is still "Do Re Mi" on the Woody Guthrie/Leadbelly Tribute
But the little mrs likes ole Johnny so I guess I'm gonna havta get it
These are great songs, and he has always been a great story teller.
Save Some Time to Dream immediately had me, and I can honestly say the more I listened the more I liked.
very diplomatic of u rummy. though I find the Boss a bit more tolerable than the Camp, I've always placed them in the same category
I grew up in Indiana, I met a guy who said he was his piano player. The guy was homeless. Everybody who knew mellencamp said he was a jerk, but the music is great, no doubt about it.