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Mule Variations
Tom Waits..
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Does
life seem nasty, brutish and short? Tom Waits certainly appeared to feel that way on
1992's Bone
Machine, an almost unrelievedly stark and grim meditation on death that piled up
critical accolades even as it struck many longtime fans as a creative dead-end. For years
Waits had been experimenting with increasingly clanging furor, adding layers of percussion
and found noises to the surreal soundscapes of his classic mid-80's trilogy (Swordfishtrombones,
Rain Dogs
and Franks
Wild Years). With Bone Machine, almost nothing remained but the relentless
industrial pounding of such doomsday lullabies as "In the Colosseum" and
"Dirt in the Ground." And after that silence. For nearly seven years, no
new Waits albums appeared, save a dissonant collection of showtunes from his theatrical
collaboration with Robert Wilson, The Black Rider.
What makes his
return with this year's Mule Variations
(Epitaph Records) all the more triumphant is the sense of an artist coming full circle by
integrating his more extreme sonic innovations with richly crafted songwriting and adding
a little dash of hope to the proceedings. Thus, Waits' millennial message is not the
apocalyptic nihilism of the previous record's "Earth Died Screaming" (as
fantastic a song as it is), but the stirring gospel-flecked transcendence of the
album-closing "Come on up to the House." It may be the single greatest thing
he's ever done a truly openhearted anthem that sounds like a classic on the first
listening.
While the occasional
track on Mule Variations may sound familiar the heart-wrenching ballad
"Hold On" would have fit in nicely on Rain Dogs, and "Whats He
Building?" makes a suitably paranoid companion piece to a prior spoken-word
transmission from the Twilight Zone, "The Ocean Doesnt Want Me"
Waits is really mining new territory here. Writing once again with his wife Kathleen
Brennan, he has retooled his Skid Row persona and given him a ticket out of town.
This year's model is a campfire-and-Backwoods-Smokes bluesman heading down the low side of
the road, past the house where nobody lives, and hoping his pony knows the way back home.
Gone, for the most part, are the dark carnival organs and clattering pots and pans of
yore, replaced with hissing, buzzing guitars, squeaking piano pedals and the occasional
crowing rooster. This rustic musical setting meshes perfectly with the singers
notorious gravel-road voice, never in finer form than on the tightly coiled blues of
"Get Behind the Mule" and the raucous hobo hoot "Cold Water" (a song
the Rolling Stones should study carefully if they ever decide to get serious about music
again).
Though more ballad
heavy than usual (tracks like "Picture in a Frame" and "House Where Nobody
Lives" teeter on the brink of sentimentality without ever tumbling over), the new
album allows ample breathing room for Waits mad scientist impulses. While
"Eyeball Kid" comes off as a somewhat strained sideshow attraction, the
one-of-a-kind "Filipino Box Spring Hog" is a gonzo masterpiece, evoking a
psychedelic rent party with a most unusual menu ("Kathleen was sitting down in Little
Reds recovery room/In her criminal underwear bra/I was naked to the waist with my
fierce black hound/And Im cooking up a Filipino Box Spring Hog"). Even
the outtakes from Mule Variations are first rate: "Buzz Fledderjohn",
available only on import editions of the album, is a spooky ode to a neighbors yard,
while "Fish in the Jailhouse" has emerged as a foot-stomping staple of
Waits current concert tour.
At a time when most
of his musical contemporaries are devoting their dwindling energies to Miller Lite music
and tired "unplugged" rehashes, the nearly 50-year-old Tom Waits is at a
creative peak, recording on his own terms for a relatively small punk rock label and
giving electrifying performances before sellout crowds around the country.
"This world is not my home," he bellows toward the end of Mule Variations,
"Im just a-passin through." On this pass through, Tom Waits
leaves a gift of his most bracing and heartfelt work to date.
- Scott Von Doviak