|
The Blacks are one of Chicago's most heavily hyped indie
bands. Like a number of their label mates at Chicago's Bloodshot
Records, they play a mix of musical sounds that is all over the
place, out on the edge, and even over the edge at times. They
come at their music from odd and unusual angles and they fill
it with processed effects and echoed voices that give much of
it a subterranean quality. There is a twisted campy kitschiness
at times, at other times a greasy cabaret sexual slinkiness,
all mixed into a rock soup that contains elements of thrash,
punk, blues and roots. What emerges is an artsy, absolutely
genreless production that will have wide appeal to Gen X'ers
and to listeners who like out-of-the-ordinary, off-center, bravely
experimental productions.
The Blacks overcome
the limitations of being a three-piece ensemble by playing a
lot of instruments. Singer/guitarist Danny Black also plays
banjo, trumpet, lap steel, organ, and saw on the album, while
classically trained bassist Gina Black (no relation) sings and
plays upright bass, acoustic guitar, piano and organ. Only drummer
James Emmenegger sticks strictly to his musical trade. To further
overcome the limitations of a three-piece set up, they make free
use of effects and processors to interject aurally catchy changes
of sonic aesthetics within songs with Rundgrenesque skill and
ingenuity, coming up with an album production that is more like
a series of connected sketches than of individual songs.
Like on many experimental projects, the artists seem to be
as in love with their switches and pedals and buttons as they
are with their instruments. While some of the playing is notable,
particularly Danny Black's lubricated, back alley trumpeting,
this is not an album that is about hot licks, it is an album
that concerns itself with layering of sound textures and rhythms
and with the overall feel, tone and suggested impressions associated
with the tunes, not with virtuoso individual instrumental prowess.
The song constructions do allow plenty of space and opportunity
for Ms. Black to make use of her classical bass training, as
she often changes the dynamics by picking up a bow or by taking
the lead.
One of the highlights of the album is the hard-rocking cover
of Tom Waites/Kathleen Brennan's 'Goin' Out West.' There is
a sinister L.A. lowlife decadence that surrounds the performance
that beautifully demonstrates the musical sensibilities of The
Blacks. With Gina taking the lead vocal on this male narrator
number (" I don't need no makeup/ I got real scars/ I look
good without my shirt on"), there is a delicious gender-crossing
carnality that would be completely at home in a European red-light
district. Danny Black's guitar has a twangy edge that works
well when set off by a music-for-the-sultan's-harem organ track.
This is music for the late night Sunset Strip trans-sexual set.
Emmenegger's drumming and Gina Black's bass give the track a
pagan fertility dance rhythm. This is absolutely primo material.
Another cut that really stands out is the swinging, boozy
'Foggy Minded Breakdown.' Danny Black leads the ensemble with
a minstrelsy banjo but it is his overdubbed red hot, sleazy trumpeting
that makes this paean to deviance cut a real grabber.
She's all alone in her skin
Needs a bigger place to be crowded in
All she really wants is a licking
Came out the same way she went in
The beauty of my life is it's sickening
The beauty of my life is on the skids
What a sweet thing to be wicked
Remember what it's like when you were a kid
And my knees are so sore
And I'm begging for more
A beating for pleasure
Now I'm a lively corpse
But the most engaging and easily accessible number on "Just
Like Home" is 'Call,' a swinging mid-tempo rocker with a
wonderfully juicy cabaret voice vocal by Ms. Black. And Mr.
Black again plays some scintillating and sensual New-Orleans-after-dark
trumpet solos that give the sexually loaded lyric an added carnal
overtone.
Up on the 6th floor
She's counting her change
But once they knew her
She's not so strange
I will take you away from it all
Once you call
In the midst of all this carnality and over-the-line, who's-to-say-what-normal-is
reality, The Blacks are able to shift their musical gears and
on 'How He Cried,' they play a lilting faux alt-country style
number punctuated with some very delicate lap steel. But as
with any Black's number, all is not as the first impression seems
as Mr. Black breaks up the alt-country feel with some raunchy
distorted guitar licks that should seem out of place but do not.
There is no point in trying to classify and simplify the music
The Blacks present on "Just Like Home" any more than
there is any sense in describing a cake as flour-sugar-baking
soda-salt-butter-oil-chocolate. The individual ingredients are
all there and occasionally recognizable, but the end product
is multi-layered confection with lots of icing and sugar sparkles
on top. And The Blacks have thrown a generous cupful of rum
into the mix just for the hell of it. Anyway, it's not a question
of liking flour or sugar or baking soda or the other ingredients
in the cake in their individual states. You either like chocolate
cake or you don't.
Cut a slice of The Blacks' "Just Like Home." It's
not a cake you may easily recognize, but try it anyway. Once
you taste the subtlety contained in the mix, you may find yourself
asking for a second helping.
* Liven up your musical life with a hot, greasy slice
of The Blacks at www.theblacks.net
or at www.bloodshotrecords.com.
Contact William Michael Smith at: wms-at-rockzilla.net
|