Joanna Newsom -
Have One on Me (3xCD purchased 2/23/10)
Two full hours of ambitious, complex music by one of the more divisive artists around right now - this is a big one to tackle. But I guess I have to at some point, and I'm not sure I'll ever get a completely thorough handle on this whole thing. I've never sat with the lyrics in front of me and followed the album attentively start to finish, but I suppose I could. I can certainly think of worse ways to spend my time. It doesn't hurt that I feel like this is the best album she could possibly have made at this point. Where her first album could seem overly cute and her voice overly affected, here the lyrics are grounded in greater emotional experience and significance, and her voice is considerably smoother, softer, and more natural. And where
Ys. was weighed down by complex lyrical symbolism, epic song structures and dense, ornate arrangements to match, here things feel simpler and more direct. Yet the song structures still don't follow the typical verse-chorus-verse format, and the lyrics are still verbose to the point of seeming to ramble. But the underlying concepts come across much more clearly, I think. The accompaniment ranges from a full ensemble to none - just Joanna on harp or piano - whatever best suits each song. And it's much easier to find emotional resonance in these songs, mostly in the form of palpable melancholy. Not that this is a sad-sack record, but I think her saddest songs to date are contained here. Altogether it comes across more as the work of a songwriter I can really identify with than any of her previous work did.
It's perhaps a little uneven, as its many detractors will be quick to exaggerate, but mostly I find this gives a little space between the heavy-hitters. Rather than feeling tedious or like filler, I think that the lesser tracks here just reinforce the ones around them. And the strongest tracks are real home runs. After the steady build-up of the first three songs, "Good Intentions Paving Co." is the first one that really gets me with its jaunty, galloping pace and jazzy inflections. Then comes "No Provenance", a heartbreakingly beautiful song which contains an odd line about a "poor little dog-sized horse" but is no less poignant for it. The second disc, probably the strongest of the three, features the excellent four-song run of "In California", "Jackrabbits", "Go Long", and "Occident". "Go Long" in particular is a tour de force of her lyrical and compositional skills, not to mention her voice. The highlights of the third disc are probably "Esme", "Kingfisher", and closing track "Does Not Suffice" which seems to cement this as being something of a break-up record. It's certainly her most emotionally accessible - and powerful - album to date while also managing to be as formally creative and interesting as her earlier work. It's quite an accomplishment, one that I thoroughly enjoy every bit as much as I admire.
Rating:
9.5/10