VISION THING Joseph Arthur

Feb 03, 2012



On an audacious new double album - offered to fans as a free download, no less - the singer-songwriter explores the intersections of music and spoken word.

 

BY ALLI MARSHALL

 

 

 

You don't listen to a Joseph Arthur album so much as live with it. Arthur's songs work on many levels, revealing meaning in layers. At first they're complex orchestrations of loop pedals (he uses tons of Moog equipment) and captured atmosphere, and then they're sonic paintings of emotional topography. And then they're songs with all the potential to remain for years, decades, forever on mix tapes. And then they're Arthur's secrets told without shame to the universe to do with what it will. We the listeners are Arthur's confessors, even as it turned out he's actually giving away our secrets. 



This is all the more true for Redemption City, the Brooklyn-based singer/songwriter's latest release. Coming less than a year on the heels of 2011's The Graduation Ceremony (in fact, Redemption's final track, "Travel As Equals (Reprise)" shares the melody of Graduation's title track), it's an astonishing feat of recording. Two dozen tracks. And all available for free download. But these aren't mere remixes or B-sides. Not just a little something for the fans. Redemption is a staggering body of work, nearly all spoken word pieces, and possibly one of the most word-dense recordings even released.



Some of the tracks have been appearing in Arthur's live shows. "Yer Only Job" was first attached as a spoken word piece to "Almost Blue" from Graduation (check the below clip from last summer in Asheville, NC), while "I Miss the Zoo" (also performed on his 2011 tour while live-painting on stage; also below is a clip from Chicago) recounts in heartbreakingly beautiful verse his experience with addiction.

 

 

 

 

 



But Redemption expands beyond that. These are not just poetic musings, not just spoken word extras. They go deeper: true poetry from an age when poets were rock stars. When Lord Byron and Percy Shelley spend a summer dreaming of Gothic monsters and penning fevered words. Arthur is our Byron, our romantic bard. But he's also fully engaged in the now, marrying verse to electro dream-pop. And he's not just waxing poetic; he's calling out a flawed system - something he seems especially passionate about. His poem "We Stand As One," written for those involved with the Occupy Wall Street movement doesn't appear on Redemption, but "Travel As Equals," which he performed on Late Show with David Letterman earlier this month, carries a similar tone: "Bloom disgust and class divide, I saw it written on the wall, The only way we can survive, We travel as equals or not at all." (It's possible that some molecules of the late political spoken word poet Sekou Sundiata, still bouncing around this plane, merged with Arthur's already over-active creative mind.)

 

 



While Redemption doesn't float amidst dappled light and lovelorn ache of Graduation, it's not without lush soundscapes, rumpled sheets and dove-gray mornings. "There With Me," words nearly obscured behind electronic scratches and ethereal chatter, is as spiritual as it is romantic. "Touched" moves even closer to the realm of ecstatic love. Arthur talks about himself in second person ("you get up, have your coffee by your canvas, throw yourself against the wall") before launching into some larger, braver realization of self and suffering as part of the bigger picture.



Both musically and thematically, Redemption is a work of risks and dares, an artist not just pushing boundaries but hammering through walls. Arthur creates beauty without playing nice. The itchy, staticy "Kandinski" (sic) is a nightmarish art history lesson, trawling modern works for meaning, or the unraveling of meaning. ("Kandinski is in my room. So is Edgar Allen Poe. The shadows dream in color. And that is their final revenge.") "I Am the Mississippi" looms heavy. Renowned producer Daniel Lanois (who is not involved with this project) could have been in the room along with his penchant for reverb and echoes and ghosts. 



And there's "Night Clothes," a sexy, aphotic prowl through the clank and churn of some concrete underbelly. It reminds a bit of "Radio Euphoria" from Arthur's 2008 EP Crazy Rain. Not that the two songs sound the same, but there's a revisiting of themes, which Arthur tends to from album to album. It's like he's less concerned with making cool, current music and instead is processing and evolving through his art, before our eyes (and ears). 



That Redemption is digital and free speaks to this. Few artists could sell (through labels and mainstream outlets) what is, in essence, a double album of spoken word pieces. By deciding to go independent, Arthur freed himself from those constraints. The 11-plus minute "Surrender to the Storm," all washes of guitar and high, blithe vocals, is a fine example of what a musician can do when he frees himself.



Then again, "It takes a lot of time to live in the moment," Arthur says in a song of the same title. With Redemption it's clear that he's trying his damnedest to do just that.

 

Download Redemption City for free in MP3 or FLAC format at Arthur's website (donations are accepted, of course, and there is also a limited edition vinyl version for sale).

 

Elsewhere on the BLURT site, read our interview with Arthur in which he discusses his (literal) intersection of music and visual art.


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