... I'm the happy man, flying the small plane...
... ALBUM OF THE MONTH & VISHE & SHIRE ...
Dream River, Callahan’s 14th album — or fourth, since dropping the Smog mantle — initially feels of a similar vintage as recent albums like Sometimes I Wish We Were An Eagle or Apocalypse,
as leadoff track “The Sing” moseys in on a slow shuffle and the rustic
weep of a violin. There’s a gentle, yet lush Americana arrangement
backing Callahan as he paints a portrait of a late night drink in a
hotel bar, observing, “The only words I’ve said today are ‘beer’ and
‘thank you.’” Shortly thereafter, Callahan’s drink order becomes an
almost Zen-like mantra as he repeats the couplet, “Beer/ thank you.”
In its strongest moments — though there are no real weak moments to speak of — Dream River
presents a compelling, gorgeous sonic world in which to get blissfully
lost. “Spring” is one such song, with hypnotic layers of guitar that
swirl like opium smoke in some dark, luxurious boudoir. It has more of a
lightly psychedelic feel than an erotic one, per se, but it speaks the
language of the loins all the same. In one of its most intense,
climactic moments, Callahan sings, “And all I wanna do/ Is make love to
you/ In the fertile dirt/ With a careless mind.” All that’s missing is
the post-coital cigarette.
Even more awe-inspiring is the gorgeous
“Summer Painter,” in which Callahan juxtaposes a tale about a summer
job painting boats with a cool, atmospheric arrangement that builds to
an eruption of feverish intensity. Through its intoxicating mist,
Callahan spins an epic yarn that extends from maritime superstition
(“For luck you keep the same first letter/ You don’t want… bad luck at
sea”) to reflections on class and privilege (“Rich man’s folly and poor
man’s dream/ I painted these… I never truly knew who I was working for
anyway, the rich or the poor/ Who am I working for?”). It’s as powerful a
song as Callahan has ever written, which is no small feat — his catalog
is pretty rich as it is.
Given the musical distance that Callahan
has traveled since layering inscrutable folk songs with boombox-queued
samples on albums like 1993’s Julius Caesar, the stylistic variations on Dream River
don’t represent a total reinvention so much as a different shade within
a similar spectrum. It’s a beautiful album on first listen, and each
subsequent spin, but as with any of Bill’s recordings, offers deeper
layers meaning and detail to unpack with each new drop of the needle. Dream River,
as with its recent predecessors, represents a stunning maturity for the
singer. Commercially, he’s unlikely to ever be a part of mainstream
culture in the same way that Johnny Cash or George Jones were, but here,
he continues to prove himself every bit the American musical treasure
that his own personal influences were and are.
As Dream River
draws to a close on the gorgeously laid-back “Winter Road,” Callahan
croons, “When things are beautiful, you just keep on.” Good advice, that
— keep on, Sergeant Callahan.
Sep 13, 2013
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