|
This collection of singles and rarities from Owen Ashworth, who records
under the accurately descriptive moniker of Casiotone For The Painfully
Alone, will serve well for listeners new to the artist as
well as those who are already fans.
All but two of the tracks that make up Advance Base Battery Live, originally
released between 2004 and 2007, are on CD for the first time here, having
previously been put out as 7" split singles or compilation tracks.
They provide a helpful and - mostly - enjoyable overview of the scope of Ashworth's work.
Broadly, the tracks can be divided into categories.
Firstly there are those with shared collaborative vocals, like
opener Old Panda Days (featuring Canadian Nick Kgrovich, from
P:ano and No Kids).
Here, the two voices combine well, to
create a warm intimate vocal sound that works well against the glitchy
backing, giving this song of youthful urban alienation ("I've been searching
this town / And all I have found / Are nights of bad sex, with stupid
boyfriends I shouldn't have kept") a feeling of nostalgia rather than the
coldness that the lyrics might suggest.
Jenny Herbinson (from
Scattered Pearls) provides lead vocals on Lesley Gore on the TAMI
Show - another corker, with a particularly exuberant electronic riff, and
again on White Corolla (everyday tales of broken down cars, phones that go
straight to voicemail, waiting in Laundromats, but lifted from mundanity by
their sparky musical setting).
Several cover versions are included, most of which are again
collaborative efforts. These are the least successful inclusions
on the album, but provide an interesting insight into Ashworth's musical tastes.
This being the case, he's clearly keen on
Bruce Springsteen, since two of The Boss's tracks are covered. Born
In The USA wins points for the likelihood of it
distressing po-faced Springsteen fanboys and being a strange, vocoder-heavy
and virtually unrecognisable version, while Streets Of Philadelphia,
conversely, is almost too similar to the original to have been worth doing.
Both of these also feature Cover who, incidentally, is
Ashworth's brother. Dear Nora (a.k.a. Katy Davison) provides a
detached, almost bored-sounding vocal for Missy Elliott's Hot Boyz
raunchfest. Then there's a version of Paul Simon's Graceland that
removes the joyful afrobeat lilt and replaces it with a lifeless drone.
It's disappointing.
Most enjoyable, however, are those tracks that could be described as the
straightforward Casiotone tracks. Notable amongst these is White On
White. It's a heart-rending tale with strangulated vocal, which saves its sting
for the very end, when the lines "All the rain on the day that you died /
I've never seen the reservoir so high / I guess this is as close as it gets
to goodbye" tell you that he has been singing about dreaming about a
deceased friend or perhaps lover.
Holly Hobby is a little heavy-handed,
but another favourite is the lovelorn, countrified It's A Crime,
with Ashworth making a surprisingly convincing lonesome cowboy, to acoustic
guitar accompaniment. Missoula and The Only Way To Cry are both more sketches/poems/doodles
than fully realised songs, with the former working better than the latter.
The album draws to its close with Sunday St, a real
long-dark-night-of-the-soul track that sees the narrator coming through and
out the other side, followed by the instrumental Voice Of The Hospital,
featuring sparkly, shimmery electronic sounds, in a pitch just short of
shrill, that provides a nice (albeit short) outro to proceedings.
Ashworth might have been better dropping a couple of
the covers and squeezing in a few more originals. And original is
probably an apposite word here, as this album effectively illustrates the
original voice and appeal of a musician who does indeed always come
across, despite the multiple collaborations, as sometimes painfully
alone.
Comments
|
 |
|