| Brendan Benson
is a band.
Sure, it’s also the man’s name.
But as he wrote the songs that would become his dazzling new CD,
“THE ALTERNATIVE TO LOVE” he never stopped
imagining the two guitarists trading licks, the back-up singer
adding harmonies, the bass drum booming through his spine -- never
mind that he does all that stuff himself. Brendan Benson is a
one-man band, but, he says, "band is the operative word."
He's neither a singer-songwriter (though of
course his music is impeccably constructed and observed) nor a
simple pop musician (though every note he's ever played is catchy
as all get-out), and even "cult artist" doesn't cut
it anymore, given the way fans, critics and DJs in both the U.S.
and U.K. embraced 2002's Lapalco. Three years later, you could
even say “THE ALTERNATIVE TO LOVE” is long-awaited.
And from the revved-up guitar chug of “Spit It Out”
to the Wall of Sound swoon of “The Pledge” to the
haunted piano tones of “Biggest Fan,” it doesn't disappoint,
offering up a dozen shimmering examples of dynamic rock'n'roll
that's both joyous and bittersweet –as you might expect
from someone whose publishing company is called Glad Sad Music.
Benson flies solo in the studio so he can work
whenever inspiration hits, with "collaborators" who
are always on the same creative wavelength. "It's childish,"
he admits. "It's hard for me to hand the sticks over, or
sit there and listen to someone else and not just say, 'do it
like this.'" But that's the way the Michigan/Louisiana native
has always recorded, going back to his teenage years overdubbing
one track at a time on a regular home stereo. Those bedroom sessions,
and some recording in L.A. with producer Ethan Johns and Jellyfish's
Jason Falkner, eventually evolved into Benson's mythological debut
One Mississippi.
But when that 1996 Virgin release (reissued
by StarTime in 2003) left him as another critical success story
on the verge of getting dropped, he retreated to Detroit's Belle
Isle neighborhood, using what was left of his second-album advance
to fill a big old house with vintage recording equipment and well-used
instruments. It was there he made Lapalco, which the Times of
London dubbed "an album of such radiant beauty and wrist-slashing
introspection that it puts all other pretenders to the Beatles/Beach
Boys mantle firmly in their place." Entertainment Weekly,
NME, Details and Mojo ("some records are so perfect they
make you worry") also fell in love with it.
“THE ALTERNATIVE TO LOVE”
feels like the precisely calibrated offspring of its predecessors
– brighter than Lapalco, not quite as big a sugar-rush as
Mississippi. "It's a nice kind of blend of the two,"
Benson says. Despite his professed allergy to singer-songwriter
syndrome, Benson has been doing more acoustic gigs the past few
years, which played into the songwriting process. And while the
songs are mostly about love, heartbreak, and connection, the context
isn't always romance – Bensons also draws on harder life
experience, like being abandoned by his father, and the death
of his grandfather who raised him. "A lot of times it might
sound like I'm singing about a girl, but it just might be about
someone or something entirely different," he says.
If Lapalco brought to mind certain dark-night-of-the-soul
records from the late '60s and early '70s, Benson has found himself
listening to things like Calexico, the Cars and the Pretenders
lately. But if you were to hit him with that old standby of a
question, "what are your influences?" he could give
a unique answer. "A lot of times I'll record or write a song
because I've got a new amp, or someone’s left a guitar at
my house, or I’ve acquired a new microphone. I just have
a real fascination with the sound of things." He even traded
in some of the stuff that figured on Lapalco – “THE
ALTERNATIVE TO LOVE” was recorded on relatively newer
stuff, digital as well as analog. "I don’t have a lot
of conceits when it comes to recording music like, 'no computers
were used in the making of this record,'" he says. “Computers
make things easier. But drums and acoustic guitars, I believe,
sound notably better on tape."
The record's intricate sonic imprint also stems
from Tchad Blake's mixes. The producer/engineer, best known for
his work with Mitchell Froom (Los Lobos, Latin Playboys, Elvis
Costello, Crowded House) is a longtime fave of Benson's. "Oh
my god, my hero," he says. "We just talked a few times
on the phone. I said, do whatever you do, make it sound good!
And he did. Some tracks, he kind of produced retroactively. When
I heard them with headphones on I was laughing uncontrollably.
I was so pleased."
“THE ALTERNATIVE TO LOVE”
is a headphone record among other things, from the Spectoresque
bombast of "The Pledge" to the mind-bending harmony
and call/responses of the title track. Other highlights include
the amiably wobbly "Cold Hands Warm Heart," which is
already a live favorite, and the album-ender "Between Us,"
which lays the raw emotion of a woman's post break-up answering
machine message over an almost-psychedelic anthem. Then there's
the deceptively sing-song "What I'm Looking For," which
offers up a worldview – about art, life and love -- in just
18 words: Well I don't know what I'm looking for but I know that
I just wanna look some more. "That's pretty much it,"
Benson says. "That's me."
Which is not to say he lacks focus. If anything,
he's too focused -- exclusively on rock'n'roll. When he's not
doing his own stuff he's producing other bands (including V2 labelmates
Blanche and the next record by Cincinnati garage-rockers the Greenhornes)."
I could happily spend the rest of my days doing something with
music," Benson says. "If I'm not working on music, anxiety
sets in. Maybe it's not so healthy-to stay locked away in a studio–you've
gotta live a life to write a song. But in Letters to a Young Poet,
Rilke said if you were in jail, cut off from the world, with nothing
but a view of the sky from a small window, you'd still have your
memories to write about. I love that."
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