
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)The Canadian indie outfit The Weakerthans has released just four albums in the 10 years of their existence, which has been just enough to barely keep their heads above the waters of obscurity. Nevertheless, the songwriting prowess of frontman John K Samson is such that the band maintains a modestly healthy fanbase; the two shows I've attended have been tiny venues (200-300 seaters), but both have sold out. The Weakerthans even surface occasionally in the pop mainstream (their song "Aside" was the end-credits track in the 2005 comedy "The Wedding Crashers"). All of the band's members have various arts-related day jobs, and this down-to-earth aesthetic is embodied in their music.
The best and the worst thing about "Reunion Tour", which was 4 years in the making, is that it has an insurmountable air of familiarity. As a fan with only marginal interest in The Weakerthans, I found myself confusing the new songs for the old songs at a recent show. Samson is a singularly impressive songwriter, and his command of language in particular makes some of his indie peers look like simpletons. The opening track, "Civil Twilight", is an eloquent fiction narrated by an imaginary, lovelorn bus driver, and the manner in which Samson tosses off the song's first lines is nothing short of masterful: "My confusion-cornered commuters are cursing the cold away / As December tries to dissemble the length of their working day / And they bite their mitts off to show me transfers, deposit change / And I can't stop finding your face in their faces, all rearranged." But Samson seems to be stuck in a melodic rut, repeating many of the same musical patterns over and over again, both here and on previous albums. This is sort of the musical equivalent of a horror writer working an axe-murderer into every book; there's a lot you can do with an axe-murderer, but after a while the reader begins to crave some variety on a more fundamental level.
Though "Reunion Tour" offers a more diverse sonic pallette than previous outings, its a fairly superficial change (it's as if this time, the axe-murderer is a transvestite). Lyrically, Samson has moved beyond the personal, sometimes solipsistic narrative style that plagues many indie songwriters, embracing instead a variety of disparate viewpoints, many of which seem to have spurred his imagination to new poetic heights. But, musically speaking, "Reunion Tour" is firmly in the mold of 2003's "Reconstruction Site", with the songs on the new album offering no structural improvements or innovations over their 4-year-old counterparts.
The one notable exception is the exquisitely textured "Night Windows", which offers a glimpse of what this new album might have sounded like if the Weakerthans had indeed achieved a full-blown artistic breakthrough. Though Samson's vocal line is still basically melodically stagnant, this fact is offset by the other musical elements in play, and by the achingly wistful lyrics. The intricate bass line, tightly entwined with the drummer's rim-shots, gives way to Samson's obliquely melancholic lyrics: "I see you suddenly alive, and nearly smiling...". The exact inspiration for the song is still a mystery to me, though the piece is apparently a hopeless ode to a lost love one, expressing the narrator's frustration at being unable now to say all the things he should have said when he had the chance. The instrumentation consists of several distinct aural elements: that walking bass line, those taut drums, the minimalistic reiterations of a single guitar chord. The song builds organically to a quietly heartbreaking climax when the other band members, singing backup in 4-part harmony, enter with the lyrics: "But you're not / Coming home again / And I won't / Ever get to say..." The addition of this musical layer brings the song to a new level; those voices, awkwardly sincere in an almost adolescent way, are immediately endearing, and over those repeated lines, Samson sings the things that he won't ever get to say.
Click Here to see more reviews about: Reunion Tour
The Weakerthans are from Canada and feature an ex member of Propaghandi and current member of Broken Social Scene. With music that channels the spirit of punk, alt-country, rock and folk, the band look set to build on the intense critical acclaim that greeted their last album Reconstruction Site. For fans of Wilco, Bright Eyes and Death Cab For Cutie--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

0 comments:
Post a Comment