The Volares The Night
We Taught Ourselves to Sing
(Rockadelic Records)
James "Big Bucks"
Burnett has never lost faith in rock and roll's
promise to upraise, comfort, and groove all
at once. His tastes exist in the 1960s and
'70s because that's where his heroes still
reside: Led Zeppelin, the Faces, the Beatles,
maybe even the Kinks and the Who among so
many other lost-to-the-stars Brit-rock icons
and never-weres. Burnett who once ran
14 Records on Greenville, selling used vinyl
and eight-tracks (and eight-track players!)
to true believers is a fetishist for
pop's delirious jingle-jangle. Never has a
man kept the faith so diligently, so faithfully,
so purely as Bucks Burnett. As far as he's
concerned, Ronnie Lane invented the guitar
and Jimmy Page taught him how to string it
and punk rock, well, it never happened.
Yet there was no reason to think this debut
from a band featuring Burnett and company
would be anything more than kitsch; what else
should anyone expect from a man who has devoted
his whole life to honoring Mr. Ed and Tiny
Tim? But Burnett and his band including
Dare Mason and Paul Averitt on vocals and
myriad instruments, not to mention a handful
of guests have concocted a disc that's
stuck in the '60s but progressive enough to
be forward-thinking instead of backward-glancing.
Imagine XTC with a Zep obsession, art-rock
concerned with all matter physical ("Morning
On You") and metaphysical ("Elegy
for Tiny Tim") with room enough to allow
for pretty grooves (the opener "Down
to the Lane," as in Ronnie) and subtle
rockers that owe everything to Jimmy P. but
repay the debt tenfold (cf. "The Spirit
Reveals Itself" and it looks like
John Paul Jones).
The rockers in the audience
might scoff at the intention (imagine
no irony whatsoever), but you can't dismiss
the affection with which these boys make their
magic. Ambition and pretension aren't always
pejoratives, especially when in the hands
of men vulnerable enough to sing in whispers
and confident enough to turn up the acoustics
all the way to nine. This ain't no cover band
at Dada on a Saturday afternoon, but the real
thing as performed by acolytes who went to
England to record and brought back a little
piece of modern-day history.
Burnett knows what the old
men often forget: Without hooks, art-rock
is just art. Which is why "Teepee by
the River" actually recalls the ghost
of Talking Heads, appropriate since so many
other specters hover between The Night's grooves;
the vocals sound like chants, save for Burnett's
he sings like he knows he can't, and
more power to him. "Morning on You"
is the pop single; "Elegy for Tiny Tim"
is a heartbreaking send-off that buries the
little man in desert feedback; and "Universe
Verse Chorus" sums up songs five through
nine if you weren't paying attention. And
you should.
Robert Wilonsky