More ideas, then, than most artists attempt, but the delivery is uneven. Every Day Is a Miracle has a lovely, swelling chorus melody, but its lyrics are toxically whimsical, full of heavenly chickens and newspaper-ignoring elephants. Byrne’s menagerie expands on Dog’s Mind, a secular hymn which compares the pampered middle classes to their canine pets: “Now a dog cannot imagine / What it is to drive a car / And we, in turn, are limited / By what it is we are.” The album is full of pronouncements like this, that aim at being zen kōans for a smartphone age, but fall intellectually short.
There are more prosaic issues too. The theatrical Byrne delivers many of the songs like show tunes, which, even if you find the aesthetic grating, can be read as a bit of knowing razzle-dazzle. But he is unforgivably fond of the top end of his register, and can be heard microtonally straining towards some big notes, like someone who has picked a Whitney or Adele song at karaoke but is determined to style it out. Everybody’s Coming to My House and Every Day Is a Miracle are badly damaged as a result.
Source: theguardian
No comments:
Post a Comment