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Daft Punk, Lupe Fiasco and Lil Wayne Make the Grade
Shelby Lynne, Herbie Hancock and Willie Nelson Also Get
Nods
Also in this month's column: "Look Directly Into the Sun: China
Pop 2007," "Last of the Breed Vol. 1 & 2" (Willie Nelson/Merle Haggard/Ray
Price), Vampire Weekend's self-titled debut, Wussy's "Left for Dead," Honorable Mention/Choice Cuts and Dud of the Month/More Duds.
By Robert Christgau Special to MSN Music
March 2008
1) This is the time of year when, digesting critics' lists going back to
December, I catch up with stuff I missed or skipped (often, I then conclude,
wisely). There'll be more. 2) I only did one Lil Wayne mixtape because the
"official" "Carter 3" is supposed to come out March 18 -- we shall see. 3) The
"Juno" soundtrack is less than the sum of its parts unless you're a slip of a
thing who's never heard the Kinks or "All the Young Dudes" (which you may be, I
know). Kimya Dawson makes lovely solo albums.
Daft Punk "Alive
2007" (Virgin)
Wondering how I'd missed these guys, I replayed "Discovery," which I'd panned hard in 2001, and enjoyed the
hooks recycled here more than I did at the time. But, sonically, I still
couldn't take it. I believe the tour was awesome -- the videos prove it. But
they also suggest why the band chooses not to DVD its world conquest -- too much
scale, flesh and bodily effluvia would be lost. Better this big fat earworm,
which translates crowd noises into music and establishes how much bigger the
band's electronics got when put to the arena-rock test. Deconstructing and
recontextualizing their tune stock "mais oui," these robot wannabes bathed the
unwashed in the blood of the synthesizer, broadening and lowering sounds that in
their original substantiations owe not just Detroit techno but Ramada Inn
lounge. Humanistic after all.
Grade: A MINUS
Lupe Fiasco "The
Cool" (Atlantic)
Because you can only get so much street from a skateboard, his morality
emanates from too far above the asphalt this time except when he's renouncing
his own sins of cool. And even so he's a major-label rapper positioned to put
the "z" in "greasy," speak for a child soldier, and call himself boring before
anybody else can. He makes UNKLE and Fall Out Boy sound fresher than Tricky Stewart. He's got that go go go go go go go go go go
gadget flow.
Grade: A MINUS
Lil Wayne "Da Drought 3" (Purloined
Datadisc)
"How come every joint be on point like a harpoon/How come every bar stand
strong like a barstool/How come every line is so raw you gon' snort two?" All
right, so he's exaggerating -- he wouldn't be the best rapper alive if he
didn't. But from the off-time stammer that intros "Intro" -- one of my favorite
moments on one of my favorite tracks on the double-CD I now possess in
two-and-a-half slightly different versions -- rarely has pop excess been so
ebullient, or do I mean pop ebullience been so excessive? When I says he loves
to rhyme I don't mean he loves to spout verses -- I mean "earphone," "real on,"
"in gear homes," "beer foam," "queer on," "Lear home," "Pam Grier on," "cashmere
on," "Eric Dampier dog," "Bill Laimbeer on." And if they don't exactly rhyme,
the best rapper alive will squoosh around until they do -- that series proceeds
from "grill on," "ceilin'," and "keep it real on." Does he make it up as he goes
along, as is claimed? Could be, because his words have little to do with
storytelling or any other species of coherence. They are among other things
silly, which bodes ill for his reputation on the so-called street -- the Reality
Police know that his guns, cocaine, pimping, murdering, etc. are the formal play
of a beat jacker who at 24 has spent half his life as a professional musician.
Someday he may feel the need to re-establish his bona fides. Right now he has
too much money.
Grade: A
Various Artists "Look Directly Into the Sun: China Pop
2007" (Invisible China)
Here be a panoply of DIY styles as imitated or reimagined by 18 young
Shanghai bands, about half of whom sing in English-as-a-second-language. I've
been enjoying it off and on for pushing six months, and although not a single
song sticks in my mind when I go away -- if there's a striking lyric here, it
hasn't struck me -- most return quickly when I come back. More important, that
joyful youth-revolt jolt keeps getting stronger. I doubt this means that in
another decade all the new bands will be Chinese, although it might. If
anything, it's as if these rock 'n' roll outliers who represent a quarter
of the planetary population have belatedly discovered what our bands wore out
decades ago -- a bish-bashing delight that portends eternal life and absolutely
nothing at the same time. It will always be a kick to hear that delight again.
Grade: A MINUS
Willie Nelson/Merle Haggard/Ray Price "Last of the Breed Vol. 1 &
2" (Lost Highway)
There's only so much three prolific old coots can do with a double-CD of
country standards, and they do most of it. Intimate with the literature, they
pick winners you've never heard, and they're putting out, always a consideration
with the prolific. Yet though the broad-beamed Price obviously needs two of the
deftest singers left on the planet, it's his ruined echo chamber of a voice that
injects a defining solemnity into the two religious songs, and everything else
derives from that. Not much kidding around here -- they're feeling their varying
ages. But they ain't dead yet.
Grade: A MINUS
Vampire Weekend "Vampire
Weekend" (XL)
Young twentysomethings who write about what they know -- college. Liberal
arts majors broad-minded enough to worry that "ion displacement won't work in
the basement," they took their Columbia studies seriously, which is my idea of
how to exploit privilege (though how much privilege is less self-evident than
Ivy-hatas assume). Hence all the flags about appropriated exotica, class
distinctions and cultural capital -- and the not unrelated correct accents,
designer brands and vacation retreats. Their chief thematic concern is whether
there's life after graduation, and rather than Afropop, from which they misprise
a guitar sound but nothing of the groove it was conceived to serve, their music,
as with most fresh recent bands good and bad, is quite Euro. Affecting a clarity
and delight that pleases the many and confounds the some, their lyrically
alluring, structurally hop-skip-and-jumping songs aren't deep. They're just
thoughtful fun. And now let me give it up to an I Love Music post by Pitchfork's
Scott Plagenhoef: "off- kilter, upbeat guitar pop, with -- in comparison to
their peers -- something singular about both their music (e.g. not just the
touches of African pop but the willingness to use space and let the songs
breathe a bit) and their lyrics (detail-heavy, expressive; too bad they're
images of wealth instead of poverty, otherwise they'd be critical manna)." Right
on, my brother.
Grade: A MINUS
Wussy "Left for Dead" (Shake
It)
I love this Cincinnati quartet for singers Chuck Cleaver and Lisa Walker, for
songwriters Chuck Cleaver and Lisa Walker, and sometimes for guitarists Chuck
Cleaver and Lisa Walker most of all. Where the pained Cleaver dominated their
debut, here most tracks are fronted by the more rounded Walker. Not that she's
at peace -- in songs that feel realistic even though their details seldom kiss
and tell, she struggles for love given and received in a state of spiritual
hyperawareness suffused with a Christianity that won't let her memory loose.
Lovely melodies soften her perpetual uncertainty. But those guitars, gorgeous
droning things boosted by keyboards everybody but the drummer takes a hand to,
saw away at her unsatisfied mind.
Grade: A
More: Honorable Mention/Choice
Cuts | Dud of the Month/More
Duds |
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Read all of Robert Christgau's reviews on
MSN Music
- Sept.
2009: Black Eyed Peas, Jay-Z, MIranda Lambert and
More Get Nods; Major Lazer, Chrisette Michele, Maxwell and More
Receive Honorable Mentions; Ginuwine's "A Man's Thoughts" Is Dud
of the Month
- Aug.
2009: J Dilla's "Jay Stay Paid," Patterson Hood's
"Murdering Oscar (And Other Love Songs)," Regina Spektor's "Far"
and More Get Nods; J Dilla, Ida Maria and More Receive Honorable
Mentions; Grizzly Bear's "Veckatimest" Is Dud of the Month
- July
2009: Moby's "Wait for Me," Mos Def's "The Ecstatic,"
Sonic Youth's "The Eternal," Allen Toussaint's "The Bright
Mississippi" and More Get Nods; Pet Shop Boys, Cut Copy and More
Receive Honorable Mentions; "21st Century Breakdown" by Green Day
Is Dud of the Month
- June
2009: Leonard Cohen's "Live in London," Doom's "Born
Like This," Bob Dylan's "Together Through Life," the Hold Steady's
"A Positive Rage," New York Dolls's "'Cause I Sez So" and More Get
Nods; PJ Harvey, Conor Oberst, Marnie Stern, Cursive and More
Receive Honorable Mentions; "Relapse" by Eminem Is Dud of the
Month
- May
2009: Art Brut's "Art Brut vs. Satan, Lady
Sovereign's "Jigsaw," the Yeah Yeah Yeahs' It's Blitz!," Neil
Young's "Fork in the Road" and More Get Nods; Mr. Lif, Neko Case,
Flight of the Conchords, Lady GaGa and more receive honorable
mentions; Bat for Lashes' "Two Suns" is Dud of the Month
- April
2009: Lily Allen, Amadou & Mariam, Marianne
Faithfull and More Get Nods; M. Ward, the Prodigy, Leela James and
more receive honorable mentions; Shearwater's "Rook" is Dud of the
Month
- March
2009: Clipse, K'Naan and the Living Things Get Nods;
Ludacris, Soulja Boy Tell 'Em and More Receive Honorable Mentions;
the Knux Are Dud of the Month
- February
2009: Calle 13, Glasvegas, Guns N' Roses and Nine
Inch Nails Get Nods; Fall Out Boy's "Folie à Deux" is Dud of
the Month
- January
2009: Taylor Swift, T-Pain and Kanye
West Get Nods; Darius Rucker, Akon and More Receive
an Honorable Mentions; Beyoncé's "I Am ... Sasha Fierce" is
Dud of the Month
- December
2008: Buena Vista Social Club, GZA/Genius, T.I.
Get Nods; Lucinda Williams, Ice Cube, Young Jeezy and More Receive
an Honorable Mentions; Plies Is Dud of the Month
- November
2008: TV on the Radio and Poet Robert Creeley
Get Nods; Iron & Wine, Todd Snider and Blitzen Trapper Get
Honorable Mentions; Bon Iver Is Dud of the Month
- October
2008: Jenny Lewis Gets a Nod; Jeffrey Lewis Is
Dud of the Month
- September
2008: The Hold Steady, Conor Oberst and Randy Newman
Get Nods; Natasha Bedingfield Is Dud of the Month
- August
2008: Nas Names Names (But Not His Album), Death Cab
For Cutie Get Complimented and the Dean Deep Sixes the Three 6
Mafia
- July
2008: Lil Wayne Gets a Good Review from the Dean
(He's Also "Dud of the Month"
- June
2008: Magnetic Fields, Santogold and More Get
Compliments; Leona Lewis Is Dud of the Month
- May
2008: The B-52's, Drive-by Truckers and the Roots All
Receive High Marks
- April
2008: Kate Nash, Los Campesinos!, Erykah Badu, Mika,
Kathleen Edwards, Snoop Dogg and More
- March
2008: Daft Punk, Lupe Fiasco, Willie Nelson, Herbie
Hancock and More
- Feb.
2008: Mary J. Blige, Manu Chao, Jill Scott and More
- Jan.
2008: Hail Hip-Hop! Ghostface Killah and Wu-Tang
Clan, Soulja Boy and More
- Dec.
2007: M.I.A., Gogol Bordello Rate Perfect
- Nov.
2007: White Stripes Not Icky But Nick Rates Low
- Oct.
2007: Kanye Graduates With an A-Minus but 50 Cent's a
Dud
- Sept.
2007: Common, Fountains of Wayne, Bright Eyes Make
the Dean's List
- Aug.
2007: Lucinda Is Laudable but Pretty Ricky Is a Dud
- July
2007: Miranda Lambert, Arctic Monkeys and More
- June
2007: Wilco, Apples in Stereo, Hot Chip and More
- April - May
2007: Beck, Nas, the Arcade Fire and More
- Feb. - March
2007: Beyoncé, Lily Allen and More
- Dec. 2006 - Jan.
2007: Bob Dylan, the Hold Steady and More
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