sábado, 10 de janeiro de 2015

Aaron Freeman - Marvelous Clouds 2012

With Marvelous CloudsAaron Freeman's solo debut achieves the near impossible, sounding like both a totally logical continuation of his band of the previous two decades, Ween, as well as a massive and legitimate musical step forward. Known to his fans as "Gene Ween," the moniker he has performed under since 1984, Freeman takes his own name for the first time on Marvelous Clouds, covering 13 songs by '60s/'70s poet/crooner Rod McKuenFreeman's enormous sense of pathos -- honed from two decades of songs that mixed funny voices with a deep sense of emotional hurt -- is on full display, McKuen's fragile schmaltziness transformed magically into an asset. Like 12 Golden Country GreatsWeen's Nashville album, Marvelous Clouds was produced by Freeman's New Jersey collaborator, Ben Vaughn. And, like 12 Golden Country GreatsMarvelous Clouds is miles fromWeen's suburban hippie-punk roots, this time favoring a slick Los Angeles studio palette of string arrangements and airy synthesizers that wouldn't be out of place on Ween's lite-prog album, The Mollusk. And, where Ween can veer from genre to genre, Marvelous Clouds provides Freeman with a sustained mood, that -- while not capturing the full expressiveness of Freeman's elastic voice -- transmits a classic pop melancholy that suits the singer and the songs equally well. "I'm a man learning to live with memories of midnights that fell apart at dawn," Freeman sings on "A Man Alone," a track whose name was made for feature stories about a recently sober frontman striking it out on his own. The album is by turns playful ("One by One"), ornate ("Marvelous Clouds"), and even over the top ("The Lovers," which could almost be a Mountain Goats song in its dark, driving drama), but the sadness never quite dissipates. "I've never been able to push the clouds away by myself," Freemandeclares at the end of a monologue delivered over squawking seagulls -- OK, maybe there's a little irony in his delivery -- "help me, please." But just because Freeman is still capable of a wink doesn't mean Marvelous Clouds is any less bleak in its outlook, redeeming in its performance, or powerful in its impact. A compelling and rich move toward adulthood from one of the underground's most prolonged and complicated adolescents. AMG.

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