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 Post subject: Year In Review: Destroyer - Destroyer's Rubies (18A)
PostPosted: Fri Dec 15, 2006 2:17 am 
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Average Metacritic score 87 (27 reviews):

http://www.popmatters.com/pm/music/revi ... rs_rubies/

Destroyer
Destroyer's Rubies (Merge)
US release date: 21 February 2006
Rating: 80

by Jennifer Kelly


Triumphantly literate, lacerating pop…this time with a band.

Serpentine, elegant, self-reflexive and imagistic, Daniel Bejar’s lyrics are the most deviously crafted in rock music these days. Consider the opening lines to “Rubies”, the semi-title track in Destroyer’s seventh full-length. “Dueling cyclones jackknife/ They got eyes for your wife/ And the blood that lives in your heart.” It’s an image that contains violence, anger, humor, that bridges high-art metaphor and colloquial come-down. It’s poetry punctured by self-deprecating wit, and it’s just the opening salvo in an album that’s a brilliant, continuous jump-cut from biting aside to literate reference to arresting image.

Art—and its difficult reception—is the main subject here. There are four songs about painting and two where critics figure prominently. A priest character, devoted to his calling but distracted by females, makes an appearance in three of the songs, most memorably in the opener where “Priest says, “Please, I can’t stand my knees. And I can’t bear her raven tresses caught up in the breeze like that.”

Bejar’s best sarcasm, though, is reserved for critics, an American underground “with not a writer in the lot”. “You can huff and you can puff but you’ll never destroy that stuff,” he says in the luminous “Looter’s Stuff”, his viewpoint careening wildly from hangers-on and pretenders ("Girls like gazelles graze/ Boys wearing bells blaze new trails in sound") to burned-out creators ("A famous Toronto painter shot me down/ ‘Oh, I’ve busted my ass on these streets too long,’ he said/ I set fire to the bed and tore his gown."). Long compared to Bowie, yet truly one of rock’s most original, eccentric voices, Bejar uses the song as a platform to mock dialogs about authenticity and innovation. “Why can’t you see that a life in art and a life of mimicry—it’s the same thing!” he wails at one point, and again near the end, notes that “I swear these Looter’s Follies never sounded so good”. The lyrics are difficult, almost impacted in their complexity and conflicting inferences, yet apart from his acerbic verses, the song has a lyrical lilt to it. There’s a wonderful, almost euphoric lift to the wordless choruses that connect his rants, a blues-ish swing in the 12/8 piano runs that snake in and out of the words.

Bejar also has a way with women, sketching them with X-Acto knife precision. Some couplets are sharp enough to hurt, as in “A Dangerous Woman Up to a Point”, where the title character argues about literature in a public square and leaves a lover for dead, at least figuratively. Others lines are fonder, as for example, “You disrupt the world’s disorder just by the virtue of your grace, you know…” Yet in a world of generic love songs, they are breathtakingly specific, nothing moon-june-spoon about them, but suggesting instead real, strong and difficult woman that Bejar has observed in detail.

Bejars songs have, in the past, sometimes seemed like vehicles for his lyrics, yet with Destroyer’s Rubies he seems to have made peace with the musical element of his work as well. Unlike his last full-length, the entirely synthesized Your Blues, or like the EP Notorious Lightning and Other Works recorded with Frog Eyes, he is working here with a group of musicians brought together, more or less, to deliver his songs. This is a wonderful, grounding influence, giving texture and flavor to his compositions, from the laid-back lyricism of “Watercolors into the Ocean” to the harder-rocking drive of “3000 Flowers”. He is, as he says on this latter song, “In time and in space and (in other words) in a band,” and it gives Rubies a fluid natural quality.

The disc closes rather oddly with “Sick Priest Learns to Last Forever”, a cut whose opening sounds so much like Neil Young’s “Down By the River” that you wonder whether Bejar slipped out and hired Crazy Horse. But, once into the cut, you realize that it stands on its own, radiant, blues-shimmering and hallucinatory, and anyway, no one could say this one sounds like Bowie.

— 20 February 2006


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PostPosted: Fri Dec 15, 2006 2:34 am 
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Bejar is one of those songwriters that I just had to bludgeon myself with until I get used to his voice. I always loved the New Pornographers, but after falling for Carl Newman, I initially considered Dan Bejar to be the ugly stepchild of the band. Rough, whiny voice, lyrical meanderer, and perhaps most jarring, seemingly obtuse song constructor.

But once I got used to those pipes of his, I surprisingly found his material to have better legs in the long run than his partner in pornography Newman, whose songs I typically like faster and tire more easily of. There's one adjective that comes to mind once you settle into his domain and it's fluid. The songs just flow, and sometimes the flow takes you further along than you expected.

My entry point for this artist was Your Blues, which I'm told is an extremely distinct stylistic offshoot. In any case, it's a fantastic album. After hearing this newest release and Streethawk, I'm finally getting the sense of what this guy is as a songwriter - he's sets down an excellent backdrop of musical scenery and then carves a lyrical path out against the grain of it. It's up to you to follow him as he tries to wander back to himself. With this album he's often self-referential (the previous album title coming up at least half a dozen times), sometimes witty (copping REM lyrics and stipe impersonations mid-song) and above all effervescent and unwilling to conform to normal song standards.

I love the fact that these songs are long. I love that you never know where he's going with them. Most of all, I love that he's distinctive, something that I had trouble with at first and now treasure him for.

Probably make my top ten.


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PostPosted: Fri Dec 15, 2006 2:37 am 
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This album is brilliant. At first I didn't like it at all but something told me to go back and back again. Now it blows my mind and will be around 7 for 2006.

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 15, 2006 2:39 am 
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Have you heard the bonus track that came with the double vinyl reissue? I still haven't heard that yet. According to some, it's among the album's best tracks.


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PostPosted: Fri Dec 15, 2006 2:41 am 
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No but good post Spade. I'm just not that big of a fan for the New Pornographers to write out something like that for this...

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 15, 2006 2:46 am 
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Ah, thankee sir. hey I've been meaning to ask you, what do the numbers in this series signify? I'm not sure I understand the 18A and 18B stuff


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PostPosted: Fri Dec 15, 2006 2:50 am 
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18 day of Year In Review, meaning these are the newest posts.

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 15, 2006 2:50 am 
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his best yet. but i'm not a huge bejar fan but i like his style though and keep coming back for more.

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 15, 2006 2:51 am 
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Bee OK Wrote:
18 day of Year In Review, meaning these are the newest posts.


lol I thought it was some weird new ranking scheme


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PostPosted: Fri Dec 15, 2006 7:18 am 
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Great post, Spade. I still didn't get Bejar even after repeated Your Blues listens. I can see why people might get into him, but it just may be not my thing.


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PostPosted: Fri Dec 15, 2006 7:34 am 
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This will be in my top 3 easily, just on the strength of lyrics alone.

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 15, 2006 9:20 am 
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I like this, but it'll have a hard time clearing the Top 30.

One positive thing I will say about this album is that when I put it on, be it in the car or at home, I usually dont turn it off because it flows so fluidly (SK's word) along...That may sound a little backhanded but I have a hard time making it through a lot of newer albums. Crash and burn casualty of the ipod/ADD era I suppose.

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 15, 2006 10:44 am 
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Not a fan of the New Pornos but I liked Your Blues. Don't listen to much anymore and I'll probably sell it back when I have the chance. Just not something I want to listen to often.

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 15, 2006 11:06 am 
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This gets a "meh" from me.

I've argued this with Spade before over Newman vs Bejar and the best New Pornos album. Pretty sure he is in the Electric Version/Bejar camp. I'm more in the Newman/Mass Romantic camp.

I never liked Bejar's contributions to the New Pornos albums. Something about his off kilter delivery or his voice. Not entirely sure.

That being said, I own Streethawk: A Seduction and this one.

I like this one much more than Streethawk. I wouldn't turn it off if it came on the Itunes or anything, it just won't make my top 20.


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PostPosted: Fri Dec 15, 2006 2:30 pm 
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May not be the best lyrics of the year, but they are some of the most interesting.

I hate his voice like I hate Anthony's (and the Johnstons), but I can't listen to Anthony, and I can't resist this. Love/hate. Top 20.

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 15, 2006 4:57 pm 
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This is my #1 this year, but Bejar is definitely an acquired taste many never acquire. I completely understand people not liking this, even though I still love it.

Now, somebody not liking The Long Winters album? That's just crazy!

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 15, 2006 4:58 pm 
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Spade Kitty Wrote:
Have you heard the bonus track that came with the double vinyl reissue? I still haven't heard that yet. According to some, it's among the album's best tracks.


YSIPLSKTHX

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 15, 2006 6:10 pm 
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its a really unique and interesting album - should make my top 20

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 15, 2006 6:55 pm 
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I think this is top 20 for me, off the top of my head. I found myself not listening to it much when I first bought it, because of the 9 minute song starting off the album. But once I forced myself to sit down and listen to the album a few times, it instantly grew on me.

I've never had a problem was his voice, but I like odd singers so...


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PostPosted: Fri Dec 15, 2006 6:56 pm 
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"top 3" for me or something.


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PostPosted: Fri Dec 15, 2006 8:03 pm 
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It's in my top 3 as well.

His songs always stood out on the NP records to me and i was hooked when i finally bought Streethawk a few years back. Every album of his since then has taken me a few listens to really get into....they always end up as favorites.

The only album of his that hasn't really appealed to me yet is the City of Daughters record........i really need to give a few more uninterupted listens.

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 15, 2006 9:53 pm 
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Yeah this is my top for the year. I totally agree wih the comments about the flow of this album...it's basically perfect. This album is a fine wine to me that needs to be savored for as long as possible.


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