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Bad Love
Randy Newman
To
the extent that Randy Newman is known at all, it's as a purveyor of sentimental Americana
in the soundtracks of mediocre films. Every ten years or so, he scores a minor hit
single with a novelty song like Short People or I Love L.A. It's no
surprise then that arguments for Newman as the greatest American songwriter since Dylan
strike most people as delusional. But now and again - all too rarely -
Newman does what he was born to do, and releases another of his quizzical, brilliant
collections of songs. This year it's Bad Love,
and it's his best work in 25 years.
Newman's songwriting
specialty has always been the virtuosic deployment of character. He seldom writes in the
confessional mode favored by so many songwriters, preferring instead to sing in the voice
of the most unlikely narrators: A rapist, calling a number scrawled in a phone booth. A
drunken, paranoid gas station attendant. A Louisiana teamster stumping for Huey Long. Most
memorably, a slave trader, enticing Africans into the cargo hold with a vision of the
America that awaits them so sweet, so Edenic, that you forget, for a moment, the horrors
they'll really face.
In his last few
records, however, Newman has started to drop the mask. On 1982s Trouble in
Paradise, one noticed that a single character dominated the album: a belligerent,
aging Angelino, successful and arrogant but crippled with sexual self doubts. In song
after song, he perfectly captured the self-satisfied voice of Reagan-era Los Angeles,
culminating in My Life is Good, in which a wealthy musician berates his son's
private school teacher for having the gall to criticize someone who hangs out with Bruce
Springsteen. The wonderful tension of the record comes from one's eventual realization
that this character might just be Newman himself.
At its best, the new
Bad Love goes even further. I'm Dead takes on his basic situation--aging rock
star desperate for market share - and milks it for self lacerating jokes: "Every
record that I'm making/Is like a record that I've made/Just not as good."
I Miss You is a chilling ballad to the family he deserted twenty years before. He'd
"sell my soul and your souls for a song," he tells them, deflating the
sentimentality of the former claim with the latter admission. The political jokes, often a
little broad in his early work, are strong. The best turns the knife on Newman again, as
he tells Karl Marx a few things about life, such as why "men much like me/froggish
men, unpleasant to see" deserve their trophy wives.
Musically, the album
is a return to form. Newman's best work has always synthesized the New Orleans R & B
of Fats Domino and the movie soundtracks his uncle Alfred churned out in the forties and
fifties. Recent albums have opted instead for a slick, commercial sound; as challenging as
the songwriting is, Trouble in Paradise finally sounds awfully like Toto, its
backing band.
This time out, he's
worked with Los Lobos producers Mitchell Froom and Tchad Blake. Backed by a small,
expert band, the feel is much like his early masterpieces 12 Songs
and Sail
Away. The occasional orchestrations are spare and evocative. And his voice -
a froggish voice, unpleasant to hear - is in fine form.
Newman has achieved
something extraordinary here: the more he reveals of himself, the more caustic his humor
becomes. He's now his own best target, and one hopes he'll continue to shoot this
accurately next time around.
- Gary Mairs