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About Eugene weekly. (Eugene, Oregon) 1993-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 2004)
CD REVIEWS BY LOCAL WRITERS T HE S POT FOR R.E.M., Around the Sun , 2004 WARNER BROTHERS RECORDS By Kris Bluth When you love a band as much as I love R.E.M., you get used to defending albums that others dismiss. Some people hated Fables Of The Reconstruction, but “Good Advices” might be my Favorite R.E.M. Song. Monster is an underrated gem, and Reveal can stand alongside their best work. And Around The Sun is their worst album. Some “fans” still want them to keep remaking Murmur, but R.E.M. has built a career out of growth and evolu- tion. I wasn’t crazy about Up and New Adventures In Hi-Fi, but the band got to stretch itself out, and R.E.M. was never boring ... ... until now. Around The Sun occasionally perks up (“Leaving New York” and “Wanderlust”), but the rest is just one mid-tempo dirge after another. This album isn’t bad, it’s worse than bad. It’s inert. I wouldn’t be surprised if someone from Warner Brothers went to Stipe’s house and pound- ed on the door. “Hey! Open up! It’s been three years! Time for a new album!” The mailslot flips open and a voice creaks out. “Only if I get to namecheck Kyoto in the lyrics.” Done, and done. $2 PBR’s NEVER A COVER * FREE POOL * FREE POOL HOURS: TUES. - SAT. • 4PM-10PM SUN. & MON. • ALL DAY/ALL NIGHT FREE PARKING AFTER 5PM 99 W. BROADWAY • EUGENE • 683-3154 writers: WRITE CD REVIEWS FOR EUGENE WEEKLY! Reviews should be between 100 and 200 words, on any musical genre, and should be emailed to cal@eugeneweekly.com under the subject heading: “Local CD Review.” Please include complete information about the CD, including band name, album name, year and record label, contact information so we can reach you, as well as a short bio about yourself. For additional guidelines and information, contact Ben at Eugene Weekly: 484-0519, Ext. 26 Adem, Homesongs , DOMINO RECORDS By Tynan DeLong On Adem’s debut, Homesongs, the latest release from the seemingly unstoppable Domino record label, this Fridge instrumentalist finds him- self donning the mask of an earnest troubadour. Building off the same gorgeously hushed ambience that made Fridge’s Happiness such a headphone treat, Adem spends most of the album hunched over a guitar, sorting the pieces of a failed rela- tionship. Nowhere is this more evident than on “Gone Away,” the album’s centerpiece. Plaintive accordion drones and whispering xylophones carry Adem’s soft lament to its stirring middle section, where he assures himself, “It’s alright/there’s plenty more left for me.” And the grand strings of the album’s closer, “There Will Always Be,” provide a touching backdrop for an understated sing-a-long. It’s a lull- aby for a campfire on a cloud. Call it Damien Rice, sans the syrup. Yet Homesongs never sounds rueful or depressed. Quiet, melancholy even, but not once do you get the feeling Adem’s going to pull a Richie Tenenbaum behind the bathroom door. Rather, the album’s a sweet send-off for a lost love. Our hero has the good sense to have a little laugh, make some fine tunes and move on. Desertion has never sounded so self-assured. Tom Waits, Real Gone , Listening to Tom Waits’ twentieth album, Real Gone, is like being transported to an archaic circus fun-house on Halloween night with a full moon, and a Chupacabra as your date: Intriguing, beautiful, and scary as hell. Waits’ voice is raw and refined, like railroad spikes sprouting into rose buds. The lyrics on Real Gone are haunted as a saloon in Mushroomcrow, Wash.: crooked, dark, aged; Whittled with betrayal, love lost, romanticism of the damned. This is the album of the year for freaks, des- perados, outlaws, individ- uals, and the un-abashed un-brainwashed, who love true Americana. 2004 EPITAPH RECORDS By Johnny Millionaire WWW.SQUAREPEGCONCERTS.COM CHARGE BY PHONE 800-992-8499 The Queen Of The Blues ETTA J AMES And The Root BAND BOBBY MURRAY SATURDAY OCTOBER 30 M C DONALD THEATER And 1010 WILLIAMETTE STREET · 7:00PM DOORS · ALL AGES WELCOME OCTOBER 21, 2004 51