| |
November, 2000
Beaver NelsonLittle Brother
Stanton Swihart, The All Music Guide
Barnes & Noble.com/The All Music Guide
If his debut, Last Hurrah, was more of a troubadour record for lonely
midnight souls, Little Brother is Beaver Nelson's Friday night album. A
raucous, rootsy club set, the album is peppered with Texas-style
stompers, sweet-and-sour Nashville country, and beer-fueled, two-step
ballads, not to mention a quasi-funk ditty in Fever Kept Me Up All
Night and some characteristically wonderful introspective
singer/songwriter tunes. It may only be Nelson's second record, but the
music is full of experience and hard knocks. Instead of making him
embittered or cynical, however, the rough road that he has traveled only
broadens and deepens his wry, complex observations into endlessly
compelling songs. Little Brother certainly proves that early comparisons
to heroes such as fellow Texans Townes Van Zandt and Steve Earle are
deserved, but in a larger sense Nelson more closely recalls Bob Dylan.
Neither a Dylan imitator nor a "next Dylan" acolyte, he nevertheless is
an outstanding lyricist whose words carry the same type of heft and
create a similar affect. Almost every line is dosed with both
world-weary resignation and black humor, and Nelson self-deprecates all
over the place in a manner that draws you in as much as it makes you
cringe with self-recognition. The songs can seem very personal one
moment, and yet, as with Dylan, there is the peculiar sense that Nelson
is standing outside looking in, having lived and come to terms with his
experiences already and so is at liberty to sing about them non-judgmentally
and without the sort of emotional attachment that could
blur their cold, knotty truths. That notion is enhanced even further
because he delivers each of his songs in a been-there, done-that,
wasn't-that-impressed vocal that makes any tune sound matter-of-fact
even when the sentiment isn't necessarily so. It is a trick that few
songwriters manage to master but a gift that Nelson has in spades. None
of the intellectual considerations of his music, however, should obscure
the fact that much of Little Brother simply rocks hard. Whether they are
pounding like a bar band, the early '70s Rolling Stones, or with the
power of hardened country combo (all of which they do expertly), his
assembled band of Austin veterans bolsters the credibility of everything
Nelson sings about. The music is so tough yet so full of moments where
vulnerability is allowed to surface. There are plenty of hooks and beefy
melodies throughout the album, but what you are ultimately left with is
that lasting emotional resonance. It is mournful in a very tangible way,
and when you are listening to the album it feels like you are losing
something or letting go, and yet even loss can be festive, if it leads
to something new.
|