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The Raven
Lou Reed
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Lou Reeds career is a mystery on at least two levels. The
first, of course, is the series of artistic tangents and blind alleys hes caromed
down at one point or another since his emergence with the Velvet Underground in the 1960s.
In a more meta sense, though, the larger mystery is that he still has a career at all, at
least on a major record label. Hes never been anything like a sure, or even safe,
commercial bet. RCA sponsored Reed through the 1970s, a decade in which he released one
successful album (Transformer),
two good ones (Berlin
and the live Rock
n Roll Animal), and a string of records that ranged from the merely
competent (Coney
Island Baby) to the calculatedly offensive. The latter group included the song
"I Wanna Be Black," the infamous noisefest Metal
Machine Music and another live recording, Take
No Prisoners, on which he spent as much time berating his critics as playing his
music. Only near the end of his tenure with the label did Reed release anything which even
approached the level of his Velvet Underground work: a pair of back-to-back albums, The
Blue Mask and Legendary
Hearts, which found him fronting a tasteful but still rocking band and writing
some of the best lyrics of his career.
Since the late 1980s, Reed has been on another major label, Warners,
shuttling around between a few of its divisions (Sire, Reprise). Virtually every record
hes made for them has been in some respect autumnal and more than a little cranky.
This has led him down some side roads, of course; one was New
York, an exploration of metropolitan entropy regarded by some as his greatest solo
album, despite its now-dated topical lyrics. But for the most part, his former
preoccupation with the race toward self-destruction has been replaced with a fixation on
death, both as it claims others and as it closes in on him. This was the basis for his
reunion with Velvet Underground partner John Cale on the Andy Warhol eulogy album Songs
For Drella, and his 1992 album Magic
and Loss. On his latest record, The Raven, Reed has combined his obsessions
with self-destruction and inevitable death into an album which attempts to link his own
songs with the writing of Edgar Allan Poe. Its not a seamless fit and,
unsurprisingly, Reed comes out looking the worse for the inevitable comparison. His
command of language is simply nowhere near the equal of Poes. Even at his artistic
peak in the 1970s, Reed always cultivated a plain-spokenness which has by now devolved
into mere grumbling. He seems to feel that listing the decadent effects of time on the
body and mind is enough; whatever insights he may have gained from his decrepitude are
largely withheld from the listener. And the song "Edgar Allan Poe," which
consists of a single, monotonous guitar riff and the repeated chant "This is the
story of Edgar Allan Poe/Not exactly the boy next door," is simply an embarrassment.
By contrast, the readings from Poeby actors Steve Buscemi and Willem Dafoe, among
others, and accompanied by Reeds musicare terrific, and would have made a
great album all by themselves.
Not every song here is a failure. "Blind Rage," which appears
early on Disc Two, is a noisy guitar-rock track. "Broadway Song," which opens
the same disc, is utterly bizarre: sung by Steve Buscemi, its a tribute to showbiz
done in a lounge arrangement complete with cheesy horns. "Guilty" features the
saxophonist Ornette Coleman, which would make it by default the best song on the record
even if it was boring or uninspired--and its not. Ornettes playing is
brilliant, especially when he accompanies Reeds croaking vocals, creating a melody
the singer can only approximate and dancing around him with endless, inspired variations
on it.
The Raven is an interesting idea. Lou Reed has had lots of
interesting ideas over the years. Unfortunately, there have only been perhaps a half dozen
occasions when the execution has lived up to the potential, and this isnt one of
them. Its not a total loss; hardcore fans will certainly find a few gleaming nuggets
amid the slurry. But its nothing a neophyte needs to be concerned with, just one
more tangent along the way to wherever Reed is going. And like so many of his previous
records, its totally, wilfully uncommercial.
- Phil Freeman