Friday 2 May 2014

Lovesong: Andrew Bird

"Sound is a wave, like a wave on the ocean
The moon plays the ocean like a violin
Pushing and pulling from shore to shore
Biggest melody you never heard before"


This morning I am mostly listening to Andrew Bird.
There's a charm, grace and subtlety to his work that is beguiling. He seems to be able to put his hand to anything; it must be difficult for him to concentrate such are his array of talents.
Songwriter, singer, violinist, and, outside of that blackbird outside, the best whistler in town.
There's a little bit of Rufus Wainwright in the arch knowingness, although where Rufus now seems keen to just show off his glorious talent, Bird always seems focussed on his muse.
He gets straight to the heart of the matter.
Clever and far from bloodless...
I love all of his albums, particularly 'Noble Beast' and 'Armchair Apocrypha' but this morning I'm sitting with his latest release, 'I Want to See Pulaski at Night'.
Although I admire him because he seems to love words almost as much as music, this work is mainly instrumental. There are whiffs of the Penguin Orchestra in it's jerky, quirky instrumentations.
Yet it's the love of sweet cyclic melody that marks Bird out.
Here's 'Pulaski at Night' live; just to show you that he's not just a studio bird. 
Please note that the album uses a full orchestra; but there's no orchestra here.
This is the sound made by two musicians...


If you don't know his work try these as a taster of his earlier stuff.
I don't want to swamp you but these are well worth the wade.
A live version of 'Oh No' from 'Noble Beast' followed by 'Imitosis' a track from 'Armchair Apocrypha'. Then a live performance of 'Desperation Bleeds' from 'Break it to Yourself'.
Finally there's the first two songs that I ever heard of his; 'Savoy' and 'Happy Birthday Song' from his debut 'Andrew Bird and the Mysterious Production of Eggs'.
And then… last but not least, and please, listen to the last one, 'Night Sky' which is sweet lullaby.
The lyric heads this piece but is worth repeating.

"Sound is a wave, like a wave on the ocean
The moon plays the ocean like a violin
Pushing and pulling from shore to shore
Biggest melody you never heard before"


Straight to the heart of the matter.
Clever and far from bloodless...







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