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	<title>Observer &#187; Borah Bergman</title>
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		<title>Observer &#187; Borah Bergman</title>
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		<title>Manhattan Music</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2002/01/manhattan-music-4/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 07 Jan 2002 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2002/01/manhattan-music-4/</link>
			<dc:creator>Seth Mnookin</dc:creator>
				
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>Stan</p>
<p>Ridgway:</p>
<p>Murky Holiday</p>
<p> For the generation that came</p>
<p>of age with MTV, the name Stan Ridgway is sure to remind people of one image:</p>
<p>Mr. Ridgway's face pushing its way out of a giant vat of baked beans in the</p>
<p>video for Wall of Voodoo's "Mexican Radio." I know people who can't help but</p>
<p>shiver when they hear the words, "I feel a hot wind on my shoulder …. "</p>
<p> It's apt that Mr. Ridgway's music is so closely associated with</p>
<p>such a memorable visual. He's always paid heavy homage to the movies, especially</p>
<p>the silents and film noir; many critics have compared Mr. Ridgway's sad-sack</p>
<p>sketches to Raymond Chandler stories, and the singer's first solo effort was</p>
<p>titled The Big Heat .</p>
<p> His latest album, Holiday in Dirt (New West Records),</p>
<p>continues to mine this vein, although it's more reminiscent of the twisted,</p>
<p>paranoid fantasies of Jim Thompson than the sleek, hard-boiled work of Mr.</p>
<p>Chandler.</p>
<p> Mr. Ridgway's voice has mellowed a bit, but retains its ranting,</p>
<p>metallic edge. "Operator, Help Me," set to a minimalist mellotron and ominously</p>
<p>persistent piano chords, feels as if it could be the soundtrack to a serial</p>
<p>killer's internal monologue: "Operator, help me / There's a sound out in the</p>
<p>street and it just keeps getting louder as we speak …. Operator, help me / I</p>
<p>can hear them by the door / And they're laughing at me, stuck in here / I can't</p>
<p>hold out anymore."</p>
<p> Not all of Holiday in Dirt is as evocative as</p>
<p>this. The album is a collection of B-sides and previously unreleased songs, and</p>
<p>when the singer strays from the knife-edged pop he's best at, he tends to</p>
<p>flounder. But there are enough small morsels here to make the whole meal worth</p>
<p>trying. "Garage Band '69" sounds like They Might Be Giants, and both versions</p>
<p>of "Silent Movie Star"-there are Billy Wilder and C.B. DeMille mixes-display a</p>
<p>genuine affection for the type of actress portrayed in Sunset Boulevard . Holiday in</p>
<p>Dirt is not a great album; Mr. Ridgway probably doesn't have one of those</p>
<p>in him at this point. But it is the latest worthwhile chapter in a consistently</p>
<p>eccentric, engaging career.</p>
<p> Norah</p>
<p>Jones:</p>
<p>Baby Billie</p>
<p> There's a small number of singers whose voices evoke a certain</p>
<p>delicious weariness-an ever-gnawing realization that life is hard and painful.</p>
<p>Billie Holiday had such a voice.SodidJohnny Hartman.</p>
<p> NorahJones may someday be countedamongthisgroup. Thoughshe</p>
<p>doesn't have the vocal authorityofHoliday, she'sagorgeous singer, and it's easy</p>
<p>togetlostinher</p>
<p>performances.</p>
<p> Twenty-two years old and too infusedwith aching to be precious,</p>
<p>Ms. Jones has been one of the mosthypedjazz artists to come along in the last</p>
<p>decade. Blue Note Records has been pushing her for months, even though her</p>
<p>debut album, Come Away with Me , won't</p>
<p>be out until late February.</p>
<p> Last month, Ms. Jones' label unveiled her at two press showcases</p>
<p>at the Bottom Line. And at the Nov. 26 concert, it was clear that the singer</p>
<p>has a ways to go before she fulfills the expectations that have been placed in</p>
<p>her. Although her voice was as languorous and beautiful as it is on her</p>
<p>upcoming disc, she did not always seem in charge of her performance, and there</p>
<p>were moments when she seemed downright listless.</p>
<p> The same is sometimes true on</p>
<p> Come Away with Me . The CD is being</p>
<p>positioned as a pop album, but it's rather subtle-too Joan Armatrading, not</p>
<p>enough J. Lo-for that playing field. It should, however, succeed as a</p>
<p>remarkably sophisticated album by a gifted cabaret singer. "Don't Know Why,"</p>
<p>the album's opener, sets the tone perfectly, as Ms. Jones wades into the song</p>
<p>with a disarming innocence while purring through lines like "I don't know why I</p>
<p>didn't come." "Shoot the Moon," with its unrushed accompaniment and</p>
<p>behind-the-beat phrasing, is just waiting to be reborn as a tearjerker of a car</p>
<p>commercial. And though Ms. Jones' reach exceeds her grasp on "The Nearness of</p>
<p>You," she leaves no doubt that we'll be paying attention to her in the near</p>
<p>future.</p>
<p> Royal Tenenbaums :</p>
<p>Mothersbaugh, humbug!</p>
<p> Great soundtracks are a lot harder to pull off than great films;</p>
<p>they must remind the listener of the film towhich they're attached as well as</p>
<p>stand on their own. There needs to be both a narrativearcand a musical payoff. TheBig Chill wasa greatsoundtrack.Sowas Pulp Fiction .</p>
<p> Many people think that the</p>
<p>soundtrack to Wes Anderson's last film,</p>
<p>Rushmore , was a great soundtrack. They're wrong. Though I'd love to bestow</p>
<p>plaudits on anything that highlights the Kinks and the Faces, the Rushmore soundtrack, like the movie</p>
<p>itself, was too precious. There were too many Mark Mothersbaugh interludes and</p>
<p>one too many Cat Stevens songs. But Mr. Anderson, who compiled the soundtrack</p>
<p>in addition to directing the film, left the distinct impression that he had a</p>
<p>great soundtrack in him, not to mention a great film.</p>
<p> Now I'm beginning to wonder. The soundtrack to The Royal Tenenbaums has its moments,</p>
<p>prime among them being Nico's ice-cold cover of Jackson Browne's heart-stopping</p>
<p>"These Days." "I don't do that much talking these days," Nico sings in that</p>
<p>singular voice that makes you wonder if she has any idea what she's talking</p>
<p>about. "Don't confront me with my failures / I had not forgotten them." It's</p>
<p>the type of song that makes you want to get in an old car with a shitty heater</p>
<p>and cue it up again and again as you drive home through the icy December night</p>
<p>to your dysfunctional family. It's beautiful.</p>
<p> But that song, the first on the disc, is the high point. A little</p>
<p>of Nico goes a long way, but Mr. Anderson includes another of her  tunes, the far inferior "The Fairest of the</p>
<p>Seasons." He also goes way overboard with Mr. Mothersbaugh's work again,</p>
<p>including nine of the former Devo member's compositions. (Separated from the</p>
<p>movie, these tracks sound like nothing so much as the music to over-caffeinated</p>
<p>toy commercials.) At the same time, the Rolling Stones' woefully obscure "She</p>
<p>Smiles Brightly," which functions as a real showstopper in the film, isn't</p>
<p>included. The Velvet Underground's "Stephanie Says" and Nick Drake's "Fly" are,</p>
<p>which makes for a noxiously wistful and winsome affair.  Enough already.</p>
<p> Borah</p>
<p>Bergman:</p>
<p>Rolling on The River</p>
<p> It's fashionable to wonder where avant-garde jazz has to go these</p>
<p>days. And indeed, the didactic, tendentious "experiments" that are often passed</p>
<p>off for music leaves the non-academic listener wondering if he needs an</p>
<p>advanced degree to enjoy what's being made to the left of the Lincoln Center</p>
<p>Jazz Orchestra.</p>
<p> Then there are discs like</p>
<p>Borah Bergman's new trio recording, The</p>
<p>River of Sounds (Boxholder Records). Here, Mr. Bergman-the John Coltrane of</p>
<p>the piano, according to Down Beat</p>
<p>magazine-teams up with the phenomenal German trombonist Conny Bauer and</p>
<p>Brooklyn-based violinist Mat Maneri. I know, I know: A bass-less, drum-less</p>
<p>trio recording sounds dicey. But Mr. Bergman is a visceral musician, and Mr.</p>
<p>Bauer can produce such ribald delights that fans of the trombone would be well</p>
<p>served by buying everything he plays on.</p>
<p> "Jim," the album's first track, opens with lots of room, with</p>
<p>single piano notes spaced out over a dirge-like cry from the trombone while Mr.</p>
<p>Maneri's violin evokes shtetl weepers</p>
<p>rather than Grappelli arpeggios. When the trio does pick up the pace, Mr.</p>
<p>Bergman's outpouring of notes-with pounded declamations and frenetic</p>
<p>chordings-lead what sounds like a marching band from an insane asylum.</p>
<p> Some of the songs on The</p>
<p>River of Sounds do sound like soundtracks to experimental art-house movies,</p>
<p>but for the most part, Mr. Bergman and his band infuse their songs with an</p>
<p>emotionality and tenderness that's still too rare in the avant garde.</p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Stan</p>
<p>Ridgway:</p>
<p>Murky Holiday</p>
<p> For the generation that came</p>
<p>of age with MTV, the name Stan Ridgway is sure to remind people of one image:</p>
<p>Mr. Ridgway's face pushing its way out of a giant vat of baked beans in the</p>
<p>video for Wall of Voodoo's "Mexican Radio." I know people who can't help but</p>
<p>shiver when they hear the words, "I feel a hot wind on my shoulder …. "</p>
<p> It's apt that Mr. Ridgway's music is so closely associated with</p>
<p>such a memorable visual. He's always paid heavy homage to the movies, especially</p>
<p>the silents and film noir; many critics have compared Mr. Ridgway's sad-sack</p>
<p>sketches to Raymond Chandler stories, and the singer's first solo effort was</p>
<p>titled The Big Heat .</p>
<p> His latest album, Holiday in Dirt (New West Records),</p>
<p>continues to mine this vein, although it's more reminiscent of the twisted,</p>
<p>paranoid fantasies of Jim Thompson than the sleek, hard-boiled work of Mr.</p>
<p>Chandler.</p>
<p> Mr. Ridgway's voice has mellowed a bit, but retains its ranting,</p>
<p>metallic edge. "Operator, Help Me," set to a minimalist mellotron and ominously</p>
<p>persistent piano chords, feels as if it could be the soundtrack to a serial</p>
<p>killer's internal monologue: "Operator, help me / There's a sound out in the</p>
<p>street and it just keeps getting louder as we speak …. Operator, help me / I</p>
<p>can hear them by the door / And they're laughing at me, stuck in here / I can't</p>
<p>hold out anymore."</p>
<p> Not all of Holiday in Dirt is as evocative as</p>
<p>this. The album is a collection of B-sides and previously unreleased songs, and</p>
<p>when the singer strays from the knife-edged pop he's best at, he tends to</p>
<p>flounder. But there are enough small morsels here to make the whole meal worth</p>
<p>trying. "Garage Band '69" sounds like They Might Be Giants, and both versions</p>
<p>of "Silent Movie Star"-there are Billy Wilder and C.B. DeMille mixes-display a</p>
<p>genuine affection for the type of actress portrayed in Sunset Boulevard . Holiday in</p>
<p>Dirt is not a great album; Mr. Ridgway probably doesn't have one of those</p>
<p>in him at this point. But it is the latest worthwhile chapter in a consistently</p>
<p>eccentric, engaging career.</p>
<p> Norah</p>
<p>Jones:</p>
<p>Baby Billie</p>
<p> There's a small number of singers whose voices evoke a certain</p>
<p>delicious weariness-an ever-gnawing realization that life is hard and painful.</p>
<p>Billie Holiday had such a voice.SodidJohnny Hartman.</p>
<p> NorahJones may someday be countedamongthisgroup. Thoughshe</p>
<p>doesn't have the vocal authorityofHoliday, she'sagorgeous singer, and it's easy</p>
<p>togetlostinher</p>
<p>performances.</p>
<p> Twenty-two years old and too infusedwith aching to be precious,</p>
<p>Ms. Jones has been one of the mosthypedjazz artists to come along in the last</p>
<p>decade. Blue Note Records has been pushing her for months, even though her</p>
<p>debut album, Come Away with Me , won't</p>
<p>be out until late February.</p>
<p> Last month, Ms. Jones' label unveiled her at two press showcases</p>
<p>at the Bottom Line. And at the Nov. 26 concert, it was clear that the singer</p>
<p>has a ways to go before she fulfills the expectations that have been placed in</p>
<p>her. Although her voice was as languorous and beautiful as it is on her</p>
<p>upcoming disc, she did not always seem in charge of her performance, and there</p>
<p>were moments when she seemed downright listless.</p>
<p> The same is sometimes true on</p>
<p> Come Away with Me . The CD is being</p>
<p>positioned as a pop album, but it's rather subtle-too Joan Armatrading, not</p>
<p>enough J. Lo-for that playing field. It should, however, succeed as a</p>
<p>remarkably sophisticated album by a gifted cabaret singer. "Don't Know Why,"</p>
<p>the album's opener, sets the tone perfectly, as Ms. Jones wades into the song</p>
<p>with a disarming innocence while purring through lines like "I don't know why I</p>
<p>didn't come." "Shoot the Moon," with its unrushed accompaniment and</p>
<p>behind-the-beat phrasing, is just waiting to be reborn as a tearjerker of a car</p>
<p>commercial. And though Ms. Jones' reach exceeds her grasp on "The Nearness of</p>
<p>You," she leaves no doubt that we'll be paying attention to her in the near</p>
<p>future.</p>
<p> Royal Tenenbaums :</p>
<p>Mothersbaugh, humbug!</p>
<p> Great soundtracks are a lot harder to pull off than great films;</p>
<p>they must remind the listener of the film towhich they're attached as well as</p>
<p>stand on their own. There needs to be both a narrativearcand a musical payoff. TheBig Chill wasa greatsoundtrack.Sowas Pulp Fiction .</p>
<p> Many people think that the</p>
<p>soundtrack to Wes Anderson's last film,</p>
<p>Rushmore , was a great soundtrack. They're wrong. Though I'd love to bestow</p>
<p>plaudits on anything that highlights the Kinks and the Faces, the Rushmore soundtrack, like the movie</p>
<p>itself, was too precious. There were too many Mark Mothersbaugh interludes and</p>
<p>one too many Cat Stevens songs. But Mr. Anderson, who compiled the soundtrack</p>
<p>in addition to directing the film, left the distinct impression that he had a</p>
<p>great soundtrack in him, not to mention a great film.</p>
<p> Now I'm beginning to wonder. The soundtrack to The Royal Tenenbaums has its moments,</p>
<p>prime among them being Nico's ice-cold cover of Jackson Browne's heart-stopping</p>
<p>"These Days." "I don't do that much talking these days," Nico sings in that</p>
<p>singular voice that makes you wonder if she has any idea what she's talking</p>
<p>about. "Don't confront me with my failures / I had not forgotten them." It's</p>
<p>the type of song that makes you want to get in an old car with a shitty heater</p>
<p>and cue it up again and again as you drive home through the icy December night</p>
<p>to your dysfunctional family. It's beautiful.</p>
<p> But that song, the first on the disc, is the high point. A little</p>
<p>of Nico goes a long way, but Mr. Anderson includes another of her  tunes, the far inferior "The Fairest of the</p>
<p>Seasons." He also goes way overboard with Mr. Mothersbaugh's work again,</p>
<p>including nine of the former Devo member's compositions. (Separated from the</p>
<p>movie, these tracks sound like nothing so much as the music to over-caffeinated</p>
<p>toy commercials.) At the same time, the Rolling Stones' woefully obscure "She</p>
<p>Smiles Brightly," which functions as a real showstopper in the film, isn't</p>
<p>included. The Velvet Underground's "Stephanie Says" and Nick Drake's "Fly" are,</p>
<p>which makes for a noxiously wistful and winsome affair.  Enough already.</p>
<p> Borah</p>
<p>Bergman:</p>
<p>Rolling on The River</p>
<p> It's fashionable to wonder where avant-garde jazz has to go these</p>
<p>days. And indeed, the didactic, tendentious "experiments" that are often passed</p>
<p>off for music leaves the non-academic listener wondering if he needs an</p>
<p>advanced degree to enjoy what's being made to the left of the Lincoln Center</p>
<p>Jazz Orchestra.</p>
<p> Then there are discs like</p>
<p>Borah Bergman's new trio recording, The</p>
<p>River of Sounds (Boxholder Records). Here, Mr. Bergman-the John Coltrane of</p>
<p>the piano, according to Down Beat</p>
<p>magazine-teams up with the phenomenal German trombonist Conny Bauer and</p>
<p>Brooklyn-based violinist Mat Maneri. I know, I know: A bass-less, drum-less</p>
<p>trio recording sounds dicey. But Mr. Bergman is a visceral musician, and Mr.</p>
<p>Bauer can produce such ribald delights that fans of the trombone would be well</p>
<p>served by buying everything he plays on.</p>
<p> "Jim," the album's first track, opens with lots of room, with</p>
<p>single piano notes spaced out over a dirge-like cry from the trombone while Mr.</p>
<p>Maneri's violin evokes shtetl weepers</p>
<p>rather than Grappelli arpeggios. When the trio does pick up the pace, Mr.</p>
<p>Bergman's outpouring of notes-with pounded declamations and frenetic</p>
<p>chordings-lead what sounds like a marching band from an insane asylum.</p>
<p> Some of the songs on The</p>
<p>River of Sounds do sound like soundtracks to experimental art-house movies,</p>
<p>but for the most part, Mr. Bergman and his band infuse their songs with an</p>
<p>emotionality and tenderness that's still too rare in the avant garde.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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