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November, 2000
Lost in the '90s
By John Nova Lomax, Houstonpress.com
Having spent the last decade in a Kafkaesque nightmare, Beaver Nelson finally emerges as Austin's next big thing
The gaunt, goateed Beaver
Nelson looks like one of
Dostoyevsky's tortured heroesa
Raskolnikov in shit-kicker
boots and a button-up western
shirt. But it was another Eastern
European author in whose
works Nelson seemed to
languish for a time, namely those
of Franz Kafka.
Who else but the
Prague-dwelling master of the
paranoid could have written a
tale as tortured as Nelson's own
personal story during the '90s?
Hailed as the next big thing by
Rolling Stone and signed to a
major label at the tender age of
19, Nelson, between 1991 and
1997, cut not one but two
albums that have yet to see the
light of day. Corporate
reshuffles, office politics and lawyerly shenanigans beset Nelson
like God plagued the Egyptians. Had there been some sort of
Faustian arrangement here, even Mephistopheles likely would
have found it in himself to void the deal.
Nelson is loath to speak of those years today. "That story's been
told, and I'd like to think I've got the momentum going again," the
twentysomething tunesmith said in a phone interview. "I've
definitely got a lot more pieces in place now, and I hope I know
more about what the hell I'm doing now than I did when I was
20."
Certainly it would seem so. Little Brother, his first release since
his 1998 debut, The Last Hurrah, was recently spotlighted on
David Dye's nationally syndicated World Cafe radio program.
The Austin media and the No Depression movement have
lavished praise upon him. The gigs are growing more numerous
and ranging farther and farther from Austin. It looks as though
Nelson at last has clawed his way out of the Kafka novel in which
his career had been trapped. Now, when he gigs in his old
hometown, he feels more Odysseus than Joseph K. "It's fun to
play here because I never played in Houston when I lived there.
It's as if I'm not from there. But it's really great when I see old
friends who I haven't seen in years and had totally lost track of.
The only way I'll ever see 'em again is if they come and see me at
one of my shows."
A product first of the Spring area and later of Second Baptist
Academy, Nelson recalled that until his mid-teens he listened to
"whatever crap they were playing on the radio." His last year at
Laity Lodge summer camp put an end to that, however, as a
couple of older and wiser counselors clued him in to Steve Earle,
Townes Van Zandt and Guy Clark. A young Nelson found what
he didn't even know he had been looking for. By summer's end he
had made his first demo, which he sold by the caseload to other
campers and hometown buddies.
After high school Nelson spent an idyllic summer in San Saba as a
cowpuncher before entering the University of Texas for a brief,
frustrating foray into academia. After one semester Nelson took
leave of UT and redoubled his efforts on the music front. Already
a regular on the Austin open-mike scene, Nelson, like Joseph K.
in Kafka's The Trial, thought his breakfast had arrived when the
major-label folks came courting. Little did he know that it was not
a meal but a persecution they held in store; it was not until the
independent release of The Last Hurrah that things got back on
track. Since then, it's been onward and upward for Nelson, and
his media kit runneth over with plaudits, some of them a little
troubling.
It is unfortunate, if understandable, that Nelson so often is
compared with his self-professed "favorite songwriter," Townes
Van Zandt. Van Zandt, for his own part, wrestled mightily with his
own critically imposed albatross, the much-dreaded and
seemingly jinxed "next Dylan" tag. This was a crown of thorns that
adorned not only Van Zandt, but also John Prine, Steve Forbert,
Bruce Springsteen and damn near every other gifted songwriter
who came along when Dylan got really weird in the '70s.
Now that Van Zandt is gone, there is pressure in Austin and
Nashville to anoint a successor, but there ain't gonna be one.
Genius can have children, but never successors. Such pithy words
as the "next TVZ" are little but the work of overexcited critics too
eager to make a name for themselves. No one can ever write a
Dylan song quite like Dylan, and nobody can write a Townes tune
like Townes could. Leading fans to expect otherwise brews up an
inevitable backlash. There is little on Little Brother that conjures
up uniquely Texan or Southwestern imagery. What it offers is
more generally Southern than our peculiar Lone Star variation on
the Dixie experience. Maybe it's the absence of the fiddle,
mandolin and pedal steel, and the presence of a small horn section
here and there, or maybe it's the Small Faces-type rave-ups.
Whatever the reason, Little Brother, unlike Last Hurrah,
conjures more Memphis than Marfa; it's more a Nashville
underground-type release than most Austin Americana of the
present day.
Not that there's anything wrong with that. To Nelson's immense
credit, the Townes influence is in tone, not in musical style. With
Van Zandt, Nelson does share that rarest characteristic of
unaffected melancholy, a poignancy that is never precious. There
is a feeling of clawing desperately for the unattainable in even his
seemingly upbeat lyrics. It is there in the voice, too, a needful and
affecting pleading that never degenerates into maudlin begging.
For Nelson, this is clearly no Morrissey-style pose, and at times
he writes a most Van Zandtian line or two, such as the following
from "Shadow on the Wall": "Life is just a mockingbird / It laughs
at screams that go unheard / dances right around above your head
/ and echoes dumb shit that you said / about the crazy times you
knew then / the dreams that you once called your friends."
Nevertheless, Beaver Nelson can truly say he has arrived when
critics stop calling him "the next Townes Van Zandt" and start
calling someone else "the next Beaver Nelson."
©2000 New Times, Inc. All rights reserved.
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