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Pixie dust & heroin
CD REVIEWS / Grabbing life by the throat (singer)

story by John Webster / Xtra 

Oh, the unbearable lightness of being Björk. On Medulla, her first solo album in three years, our fair pixie is examining the fragility of human mortality and she’s also in love, questioning the love and celebrating it. The press is going on about this album being avant-garde, all vocal layering, experi-mental with no instrumentation. But it really isn’t that far off from her past efforts (it’s just more classical, not so pop). With the ample help of Rahzel (The Roots), Mike Patton (Faith No More), Robert Wyatt (Soft Machine), The Icelandic Choir, Tagaq (Inuit throat singer) and various human beatboxes... who needs guitars?

The mostly human-made computer-manipulated sounds on the album have a creepy cold grandness to them. The album very much reminds me of Remembrance Day services at school. It’s all very pretty but something scary is going on and it gets a tad boring at times. But the words impress. Björk has never written more thought-provoking, genuine lyrics. On “Where Is The Line” everything is compact and cunning with soldiering beats and the choir backing Björk’s thoughts. “Where is the line with you/ I want to be flexible.” “Vokuro” is a magnificent, majestic Icelandic choral piece.

“Oll Birtan,” “Ancestors” and “Submarine” are annoying and extremely unlistenable.

I’m in love with “Oceania” and its nifty playful organic choir and spooky metallic samples. It’s all wiggles and giggles to gargling beats as Björk exclaims, “Every boy is a snake/ Is a lily/ Every pearl is a lynx/ Is a girl.” It’s a garden of unearthly delights.

“Triumph Of The Heart,” the last track, is the only song on the album you can certainly dance to. Warped and whimsical with a human trombone and Björk’s strange and beguiling verse. “Smooth soft red velvety lungs/ Are pushing a network of oxygen joyfully/ Through a nose/ Through a mouth/ But all enjoys/ Which brings us to/ The triumph of a heart/ That gives all/ That gives all.” Sexiness isn’t all tits and ass. It’s blood and bone. Who knew?

The Libertines’ self-destructing lead singer Pete Doherty is a self-confessed drug addict and convicted thief. His tense love/hate relationship with band mate and co-songwriter Carl Barat has made their self-titled second album a bit of a mess. But what a pretty mess! It’s straight ahead vigilant cocky pop. They could be as strong and vital as The Smiths, The Kinks or The Clash. But if Doherty keeps spinning out of control they’ll just become The Rehab Four.

The Clash’s Mick Jones is once again at the helm as producer (he produced 2002’s fiery debut, Up The Bracket). He gives the solid songs an aggressive gin-soaked beauty and the jangly lazy underdone tunes a confessional truth. Lyrically and musically the album deals with Doherty’s emotional tortured soul without falling apart. Doherty never becomes a joke. Barat and Jones are way too talented and smart to let that happen.

“Music When The Lights Go Out” showcases Doherty’s posh mod stylings (similar to Pulp’s Jarvis Cocker) as guitars gently weep and jangle to his sombre commentary. “All the memories of the pubs/ And the clubs and the drugs and the tubs/ We shared together/ Will stay with me forever.” The aggressive “Arbeit Macht Frei,” “What Katie Said” and “What Became Of The Likely Lads” are solid loveliness. On “Can’t Stand Me Now” the hard-hitting drums and guitars reveal Doherty’s funny sad words. “Cornered, the boy kicked at the world/ The world kicked back a lot fuckin’ harder.”

MEDULLA.
Björk.
Elektra. $15.99.

THE LIBERTINES.
The Libertines.
Rough Trade. $14.99.
Music alerts
John Webster

I just can’t get enough: For their new compilation, Saint Etienne: Songs For Mario’s Café (Sanctuary Records Group), Brits Sarah Cracknell, Bob Stanley and Pete Wiggs (Saint Etienne) have selected mostly unfamiliar yet comfy cozy “songs for cafés and café folk.” It’s a great introduction to an eclectic mix of songs from 1954 to 1975. An album of folky surf, soul pop, reggae, dub and doo-wop. A perfect cathartic soundtrack for that end of summer/ beginning of autumn state of mind. It’s all incense and cinnamon sticks.

“I Do” by The Moments is an R&B screamfest of love with strings attached. Try not to weep (or laugh) through Tammy St John’s “Dark Shadows And Empty Halls.” When she sings “Since he’s gone/ Life is so lonely,” she sings “lonely” in a delicate drippy falsetto. Ruth Copeland shows her up on “The Music Box.” It’s basically fluffy pop about a music box “playing our favourite songs.” As the beat becomes more pronounced, Copeland starts her uncontrollable fake blubbering. She sounds exactly like Warhol’s drugged-out suicide superstar Andrea Feldman.

I was spellbound by the sunlit Spinnersesque production of The Chairmen Of The Board’s “I’m On My Way To A Better Place.” “I’m leaving hate and prejudice behind,” declares the lead singer as the percussion tickles him forward. A lovely find. Other killer tracks: “Man Alive” by Tony Hatch, “Can’t See For Looking” by The Bobcats, “I Love You For All Seasons” by The Fuzz and “Umbopo” by Doctor Father.

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Go see: Stockholm’s pop beautanians, The Concretes play music from their intoxicating self-titled debut. And it’s their first time in Canada. Mon, Oct 11 at Lee’s Palace (529 Bloor St W).

Detroit’s unisex foursome, The Von Bondies perform their riotous, hard drivin’ tunes. Wed, Oct 6 at The Mod Club Theatre (722 College St).

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Yikes!!! That soprano cockerspaniel they call Sarah Brightman comes to town for her Harem World Tour. Mon, Nov 1 at The Air Canada Centre (40 Bay St).
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