SILVER JEWS at the Crofoot Ballroom
SUNDAY AUGUST 31
doors at 8PM
tickets: $12 in advance (buy tickets)
ยป BACK TO FULL EVENT SCHEDULE
SILVER JEWS: David Berman's band of introverted, downcast poetic
weirdness. Berman inadvertently built himself a legend: He refused to
play live, he didn't speak to the press, and he was nearly always
associated with his pal (and occasional bandmate) Stephen Malkmus.
Times have changed a bit, and the Crofoot is honored to present this
rare live appearance. The
BBC checks in with this great review of the
Silver Jews' latest: "The Silver Jews' sixth album cover - wherein
three stuffed Babar toys climb onto a rocky outcrop - mysteriously and
trickily relates to the record's tales of virtue gone to seed. But in
2008 what are the odds of ever seeing it? Since the likelihood is that
most will simply download the best tracks for their mobiles, it's best
to forgo theoretical discussion about the gap between speech and song,
in favour of an appreciation of the album's country-rock attack,
ethereal choruses and mosaic burr. Yes David Berman (along with wife
Cassie) is back with yet another line-up in his journey along a road
that's long since ceased to be incorrectly termed 'Pavement offshoot'.
Actually, 'Look Out Mountain, Look Out Sea' is too varied an album to
be called country, or rock, let alone country-rock. On the opener What
Is Not But Could Be If, head songwriter Berman comes across like a
latter-day psychedelicized Johnny Cash, throwing thoughts like
tomahawks and quoting Yiddish wisdom. This urgent, apocalyptic mood
continues on the shimmering alt-pop slabs of Suffering Jukebox and My
Pillow Is A Threshold. But the album's brilliance lies in its mix of
approaches. There are the disturbing and arresting visions of Strange
Victory, Strange Defeat and San Francisco B.C. (a distant relation of
Dylan's 115th Dream); the marimba delirium of Candy Jail and the
ship's horn and seagulls blasting on Party Barge. In addition, the
naive chiming rendition of Japanese composer Maher Shalal Hash Baz's
'Open Field' offer a perspective upon Berman's last-chance Texaco of
lowlife insanity and romantic longing. The man's final triumph here
lies in his lyrical vision, which goes beyond merely skewering a world
of craven mediocrity to suggest better possibilities, where the end
might just be another beginning. But rather than expound further on
the Silver Jews' new sympathy for unloved machine humanity, perhaps
it's enough to say that this is the best album to come out of
Tennessee this year; indeed possibly the world. It even has a chord chart. So you really should get your own copy." With
CORTNEY TIDWELL.