High Bias
February 16, 2003
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Aural Fixations

Nocturama NICK CAVE & THE BAD SEEDS
Nocturama
(Mute/Anti-)
The wild, weird world of Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds can be a forbidding one for the newcomer. The band is capable of achingly beautiful melodies and exquisite arrangements, but it's just as likely to veer into howling noise that sounds like a typhoon about to touch down. Frontman Cave can croon with the best of them, caressing a lyric like it's his only beloved, but he can also worry and tear at a libretto like a vicious dog. He can write the most romantic of lyrics, and these days often does, but he tends to boobytrap them with either a downbeat melody or a menacing turn of phrase; his characters look for love but their motives for doing so are often suspect. In a Cave song the protagonist may be pledge true devotion, but he (or she) can also fall into acts of appalling violence. The Bad Seeds' music balances darkness and light, faith and despair, romance and degradation, selflessness and sociopathy better than just about anyone else. It's a mix Cave's legion of followers and fans eagerly take to heart every time he and the Seeds release a record. But it's not the kind of material the masses find particularly easy to digest, and Cave's stardom remains of the cult variety.

With his fourteenth album Nocturama, however, Cave and the Seeds have crafted what may be the most accessible record of their career. What's interesting about this assertion is that it's probably a coincidence; Cave never considers anything other than his own artistic standards when writing songs, and the band couldn't deliberately create a top-40 pop ditty even if it wanted to. (Actually, the musicians are perfectly deft enough to play anything they want; it's just unlikely that mainstream pop would ever occur to them.) But some confluence of the moon, stars and tides has prodded the Bad Seeds towards a sound that, while not exactly mass-market, is at least friendlier than its usual gloomy aura, and they've accomplished this without sacrificing anything that makes the group what it is.

As with The Boatman's Call and No More Shall We Part, the ensemble's last couple of highly acclaimed albums, Nocturama is dominated by ballads, mostly exploring the theme of love and devotion. (The mysterious "There is a Town" is the only tune here to delve into Cave's pet theme of spiritual confusion.) "Wonderful Life," "Still in Love" and "Right Out of Your Hand" float on some of Cave's most beauteous melodies; "Rock of Gibraltar" is easily one of his most heart-stoppingly romantic tunes, sung with quiet passion and earnest promise. Of course, as with any Cave love song, there is some subtle sabotage. "Still in Love" sounds like it takes place during a wake, as the singer silently pledges his heart to the recently bereaved, and just why are "the cops hanging around the house?" "Right Out of Your Hand" throws in couplets like "I mean you no harm/When I tell you you're blind" and "But any fool can tell you/It's all in your mind," making one wonder about the sincerity behind the lover's declaration. "Wonderful Life," with a downbeat minor key melody and lyrics like "It don't matter much/We got nothing much to lose/It's a wonderful life/If you can find it," is more plea than promise. "Rock of Gibraltar" seems the most straightforwardly lovely when Cave sings "Let me say this to you/I'll be steadfast and true/And my love will never falter"—until you get near the end, where he sadly croons "Could the powers that be/Ever foresee/That things could so utterly alter?," concluding "All the plans that we laid/Could soon be betrayed/Betrayed like the Rock of Gibraltar." It's the kind of song lovers would play at their wedding without listening to closely to the actual words. Despite the arsenic lacing the flower, however, it's still one of Cave's most beautiful creations. (more)

Album reviews of new music by:

All Night
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d Henry Fenton
The songs and performances are in a sense typical of the poppier strain of the alternative country genre, yet Fenton does this style quite well. (more)
Fieldwork
On its debut album Your Life Flashes, Fieldwork most definitely plays pure, unadulterated jazz. (more)
Gordian Knot
Emergent Sean Malone borders his jazzy, shapeshifting melodies with more stable structures this time out; if it's not quite verse-chorus-bridge-chorus, it's close enough for non-bass freaks and non-prog fans to grok. (more)
Holopaw
Holopaw [Holopaw writes] gently melancholy, achingly pretty pop songs with roots in country, folk and psychedelia, like the Flying Burrito Brothers after being forcefed Nick Drake records. (more)
Scissorfight
Scissorfight fits in perfectly with the new landscape of aggressive hard rock on its EP Potential New Agent For Unconventional Warfare. (more)
Wormbelly
Wormbelly crafts a thick, satisfying modern rock platter with its second album The Guf. (more)

Blue Wild Angel: Live at the Isle of Wight
And revisit the refreshed sounds of Jimi Hendrix.

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