The following personal anecdote should suffice to introduce my review of former child prodigy Conor Oberst's final album under the Bright Eyes moniker, The People's Key: while a sophomore in college, and still under the impression that there were such a thing as "bad" or "good" bands and artists, whose music I would either always or never like, a friend told me that the great thing about Oberst's music was that every album sounded like "a different band," in response to which I could not help but thinking: "but that's his problem." However, because his albums usually find Oberst collaborating with a large group of artists representing radically different genres—in this case: post-hardcore (Cursive), dream-pop (Now It's Overhead), dance-punk (The Faint) and indie-electronic (The Berg Sans Nipple)—his apparent proclivity towards fad-dependent dilettantism might actually be the result of an intentional abnegation of authorial control: perhaps Oberst would rather let his collaborators run wild creatively than confine them to strict guidelines, even at the cost of producing a body of work far too eclectic for its own good.
Opener "Firewall" begins with a spooky, two-minute "Illuminati are lizard people"-rant performed by [some guy whom neither anyone on Internet nor I can name at this juncture] and set to a foreboding synth score; eventually a spare guitar line—which the sideman seems to have trouble playing—is introduced, as well as some highly compressed and poorly mixed vocals: these technical fluffs tend to distract, and the song is further hampered by a bored melody and there not being a whole lot it apart from some obviously over-considered cutesy drum programming and flirtations with faux-IDM that should impress those to whom they appear as revolutionary innovations. "Shell Games" is a bit more straightforward: Oberst's wordy lyric strongly and square synths strongly recalling Bruce Springsteen and the E-Street band (respectively); he seems to excel more at straightforward homage-dabbling than avant-garde-diddling. Bright Eyes' penchant for time-honored chord progressions cripples him slightly. It could be argued that recycled ideas are an intrinsic part of pop music as it is a folk art, but it becomes something of a problem when a given track finds Oberst playing an unoriginal song with unoriginal lyrics in an unoriginal style, as it is not clear what his "contribution" was: a perfect example of this is "Beginner's Mind," which contains the lyric "a snuff film on a jumbo-tron for all the world to see" which is like totally heavy man.
"Approximate Sunlight" features the same tinny, thin-sounding vocal processing of the previous three tracks—this is legitimately unpleasant sounding; I can't imagine what producer Mike Mogis was thinking—contains one of Oberst's most vaguely poetic-sounding lyrics and super-emotional voice-cracking, and finds the artist doing his best to approximate a slithery, serpentine trip-hop soundscape. "Haile Selassie" features lines like "holding our tears while we flipped the album" and a borderline math-rock-y backing instrumentation which gets boring after a few bars. " With its computerized, clipped acoustic guitars, synth-strings and densely layered vocals, "A Machine Spiritual (In the People's Key)" is a slightly more successful mish-mash of experimental-seeming styles whose title contains a post-positional adjective. "Triple Spiral" is an explosively loud rock song returning to the Springsteenian over-the-top-ism of "Shell Games" which, along with that track, is one of the album's strongest tracks. "Ladder Song" features even more sexy, female-identified poetry and something recorded candidly with a walkman at a child's piano lesson, and I can't decide which genre "One for You, One for Me" falls under, but it's one of the album's better tracks so I'll leave it alone.
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