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“My Slumbering Heart” – Rilo Kiley
(Words/music: Jenny Lewis and Blake Sennett, available on The Execution of All Things, Saddle Creek 2002)

It’s unfair to say that Rilo Kiley were better when they were unpolished for a couple reasons.  First, I don’t mean this to suggest they were ever rough; they were one of the tightest live bands I’ve seen far before Jenny Lewis tried to become a pop star.  It also gives the wrong impression about The Execution of All Things.  It’s less rough than it is unpasteurized – one where the rough edges were like birthmarks – attention grabbing and character building.  Where much of the later Rilo Kiley records try to set up Lewis for her star moment, her brashness feels more charming than the slick sheen backing her in recent years.

I don’t just mean the cursing; Lewis’ lyrics here have a brashness and directness without being purely confessional.  “My Slumbering Heart,” for instance, describes those moments somewhere between being fully awake and fully asleep, often triggered by too many stressful days and late nights.  Childhood memories collide head-on with adult awareness and Lewis carefully tries to balance the nostalgia for childhood games with adult irritability.  The song then shifts to a half-awake, half-asleep scenario, where her lover in bed and the song on the radio seem too hazy to be completely real yet believable enough to seem like reality.  Eventually, she takes a break from assessing her fatigue and chronicling her dreams to step back and change perspective slightly.  Rather than focus on the things draining her, she shifts her focus to the things that rejuvenate her – specifically waking up next to this person buried under the covers.  The guitar and keyboard crashes behind her, giving the most emotionally direct moment in the lyrics the musical climax.  It’s this sort of rush – both musically and lyrically – that gets smoothed out too often.  It’s too bad, because this is the spark that a lot of their later records lack.

More on Rilo Kiley: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: rilo kiley | jenny lewis | 2002 | 2000s | saddle creek |
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“Let’s Not Shit Ourselves (To Love or To Be Loved)” – Bright Eyes
(Words/music: Conor Oberst, available on Lifted Or The Story Is In The Soil, Keep Your Ear To The Ground, Saddle Creek 2002)

As news of author J. D. Salinger’s passing spread this afternoon, I found myself thinking about the New York Times article “Get a Life, Holden Caulfield” from this past June.  In it, Jennifer Schuessler culls anecdotes from teachers who say that Holden Caulfield, the protagonist of Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye, no longer resonates with modern teenagers.  “Shut up and take your Prozac” quips one student at the end of the article, and from having taught the book the past few springs, this reaction isn’t unique.    I even think back to my first introduction to the book when I read it a dozen or so years ago.  I remember going home and asking my dad (an English teacher himself, and a teenager when the book became popular) what made the book so controversial (“you never read ‘crap’ in a book back then” is how I remember it).  Anyway, I remember finding all of the contradictions amusing and could empathize with the way Holden seethed with righteous anger.  It was only returning to the book later that I found his story as a series of cries for help, seeing Holden less as a snotty, self-righteous curmudgeon as a confused and damaged soul - one who desperately wanted to connect yet didn’t quite grasp the idea of meeting someone halfway. 

A few minutes later, my mind jumped to “Let’s Not Shit Ourselves.”  I’ll stop short of equating Conor Oberst’s persona with Holden Caulfield (for a variety of reasons, the primary being that things rarely equate themselves that cleanly), but my own personal relationship with these protagonists changed in similar ways.  I fell hard for Lifted when it came out in part because Oberst’s persona exhibited a lot of the same qualities I wanted to see in myself - he was angry at the world and could frame his anger and heartbreak with the eye of a poet.  I remember nodding my head along with the way he went through the different manifestations of bullshit in the song.  And like this narrator (and Holden too), I was blind to the bullshit in my own life.  Rather than take a deep look inward and risk finding something infuriating in myself, I focused my anger on the hypocrisy in the rest of the world.  Like Holden, this narrator wants something real and detests anything getting in the way.  However, neither looks in the right places.  Whether it’s Holden’s different personas or Oberst’s grades as false talismans of learning, both build their own reputations on the same phony foundations they seek to destroy. 

Eventually, Holden and Oberst’s narrator both have breakdowns.  While it’s unclear whether Holden learns his lesson after hitting rock bottom (or, to be fair, whether Oberst’s narrator genuinely believes what he says from his hospital bed), both needed to fall.  While my own epiphany thankfully wasn’t through a nervous breakdown, it changed how I looked at these characters.  Gone was the question whether they were heroic or pathetic, replaced with the thought that it was part of the cycle of coming to terms with one’s vulnerability.  What makes them both so powerful is that they speak equally to those on both sides of the divide.  The young adult, fueled by teenage invulnerability, may look at these characters as the embodiment of things thought yet never said.  At a healthy distance from that time in my life, I’m now seeing these barbs less as signs of strength and more as the moves of a wounded animal raging against a world that’s starting to crack through the surface. 

Of course, maybe I’m projecting too much of myself onto this, but I suppose that’s why these things dig in so deep.  Seeing ourselves in characters like these gives us the opportunity to look study ourselves from the outside.  When we’re lucky, it changes how we think from the inside as well.

More on Bright Eyes: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: bright eyes | conor oberst | 2002 | 2000s | saddle creek | j.d. salinger |
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“Mall of America” – Desaparecidos
(Words/music: Desaparecidos, available on Read Music / Speak Spanish, Saddle Creek 2002)

Throwing down the word “capitalism” in a song titled after the biggest shopping center in North America conjures up immediate associations.  When it’s Conor Oberst, heir to the Dylanesque title of Angry Young Man, letting the word eek out with a healthy dose of scorn, that leap becomes easier.  Capitalism is an easy punching bag, especially when set up as the antithesis of art, and when Oberst throws out the line “there are no art forms now, only capitalism,” it’s hard to deny it as a countercultural rally cry.  In our post-Carles world, this line seems either completely tongue-in-cheek or astutely accurate (depending on how you read Hipster Runoff, I suppose), but it’s easy to connect the dots between Oberst, his side project that references disappearing dissidents in South America, and an anti-capitalist stance.

It’s not that this reading is wrong (after all, that line is hard to read differently even in context), it just feels incomplete.  Oberst, better known as the brains and voice behind Bright Eyes, made a sharp aesthestetic shift with this Desaparecidos record.  Right between the Fevers and Mirrors and Lifted… albums, Oberst was on the verge of minor indie stardom, already garnering whispers as the “new Dylan” (no matter how apocryphal they may have been).  Regardless, it’s easy to see how some would chide Oberst for abandoning the mode that was in the process of making him famous.  It’s these naysayers that Oberst addresses directly in the first line of the song: “They say it’s murder on your folk career / To make a rock record with the Disappeared.”  It’s not quite Dylan Going Electric, but it’s an impressive moment of self-awareness to dismiss his critics, declare that “there is not an image that I must defend,” and declare the “death of art” all in one verse.  Of course, it helps to have such a weighty track behind one of his most vitriolic moments, and even if it feels a bit aimless, the young Oberst was at his best and most focused when his feelings were clearest.  Even if it feels a little sophomoric now, it still feels good to scream every once in a while.

More on Desaparecidos: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: desaparecidos | conor oberst | bright eyes | 2002 | 2000s | saddle creek |
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