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Learn to Sing Like a Star

by

Kristin Hersh

 
Learn to Sing Like a Star
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The Sylvia Plath of leftfield rock returns.

  • We Say...

    Kristin Hersh has always danced a distracted waltz across her own quixotic, fractured psyche, while simultaneously sounding like the sum total of the anxieties available to modern America. With Learn to Sing Like a Star, this everywoman solipsist may have recorded her strongest album to date.

    Hersh’s creative drive remains an existential fear of falling through the cracks in the mottled surfaces of 21st-century living. On this record, on which she plays every instrument except drums and violin, she summons up a music that replicates that intuited, queasy wariness: a sparse yet layered narcoleptic rock that ticks and twitches like a thought process striving to avoid caving in upon itself.

    The album opens with a thunderbolt. "In Shock" finds Hersh emerging from beneath shifting, colossal rhythms to address lost souls, adrift in a loveless world: “Your empty arms/ Waiting for no one.” Famously bipolar, Hersh has always felt too much, or not enough: on the spectral "Nerve Endings," she despairs of “Idiotic optimists rubbing salt into my wrists” before wondering, “Could you ever really live in a house? Could you ever live in a body?”

    Hersh’s personal black dog is savaging her again on "Day Glo," a visceral chug of ambient garage rock that suggests Janis Joplin crooning the works of Sylvia Plath. Hersh’s husky vocal has deepened, grown more disturbingly raw than the ethereal trill that lilted through early Throwing Muses — on Learn to Sing Like a Star, she frequently sounds like Cerys Matthews undergoing an uncharacteristic long, dark night of the soul.

    The punningly-titled 15-second spooky-blues instrumental "Christian Hearse" shows Hersh has not lost her knack for black humour, but generally there is little cause for levity here. "Vertigo" again showcases her wondrous capacity for generating spindly yet haunting music that mirrors a collapsing inner narrative as she marvels at life’s cruel transience: “Half a shell of former selves/ Bury me twice/ Isn’t this a lousy drug?/ Isn’t this a pretty fall?”

    A devastating set closes with the brutal opiate strum of "Wild Vanilla" and the funereal foxtrot of "The Thin Man." After 15 years of sustained excellence, there is a danger of taking Kristin Hersh for granted, but the transfixing beauty at the heart of Learn to Sing Like a Star can cause you, even this late in the day, to catch your breath. It's tremendous.

  • They Say...

    Learn to Sing Like a Star is, without doubt, a Kristin Hersh record that's not entirely divorced from a Throwing Muses record (she has announced that the Muses aren't a dead concern), while also touching on 2001's Sunny Border Blue and her last solo offering, The Grotto, released in 2003. Her first solo offering in nearly four years, Learn to Sing Like a Star is nigh on worthy of rejoicing over. Hersh produced the record herself, and plays everything on it but drums -- played by bandmate David Narcizo -- with support from Martin and Kimberlee McCarrick on cello and violin, respectively. She has a bona fide single in the opening cut, "In Shock." A fast waltz tempo is ushered in by drums, electric guitar, and piano and the hook opens itself because in some sense, the rhythm is the hook. The dynamic is taut, and Hersh goes right into what she does best: lays out a naked lyric that sears immediately, simply peeling the flesh back: "Pinned by a dream state/You are fearless/And your empty arms/Waiting for no one/You wanted to be wanted...." The strings enter and underscore the shuffling kick drum and snare, and Hersh's voice is already reaching for it, that place in her body where the well overflows with emotion, completely free of bullsh*t observation. Of course, it reaches the listener that way, too. The three-and-a-half-minute "Day Glo," ushered in by both electric and downtuned acoustic guitar, underscores a single-note lyric line. Narcizo comes in on the refrain: "Getting up is what hurts...." By the time the second chorus comes around, strings, her backing vocals, and a full-on kit drum and bassline break the emotion in the tune wide open. She returns to the subtle dynamic that is raged, caged, and ready to spring at the first opportunity. Her voice becomes a torn seam, a ragged-edge knife as she nearly screams: "Then you melt into the background/Adding injury to your insult..." She loses it near the end with layers of backing vocals soaring behind her unhinged electric guitar. Cacophony and near silence hold hands on this recording. The instrumental blues "Christian Hearse" follows here, out of tune, faltering, but never out of time, though it is out of space, someplace from the Delta where it met the northern climes. There are two more instrumental pieces titled simply "Piano 1" and "Piano 2." They break the album in places to allow you to catch your breath. There is no lack of pathos on Learn to Sing Like a Star, and the album seems to be about learning to go on after grief, loss, and perhaps emotional abuse. The songs aren't saturated with the word "I," either. There are more "you" and "yours" here, although the first person is certainly present as well. The wily, raw emotion precludes these songs from being merely empathetic; Hersh goes further in both lyric and musical composition than she has before. There is a degree of not only sophistication but restraint in her attention to texture, detail, and dynamic. Her previous solo records, fine as they are, bring out her dark and darkly humorous tomes in a steady buildup. Here, surprise is around every corner, and the potential for it lies behind every word twist or angling guitar line. The stuttering rocker "Peggy Lee" features some knockout electric guitar entwined with the strings. Fuzzed explosive six-string and an expressionistic lyric make this tune addictive. Its middle eight contains a complete shift that makes the tune an obsessive listening experience. "Vertigo" is the most poignant cut here; if personal and emotional disintegration had a theme song, this acoustic ditty would be it: "...This place makes me feel like I'm dead haunting/It comes when you steal a Persephone pit/Swallowed with the oxygen that bruised our bones/Swallowed with the pathetic cry, 'Take me home.'" "Wild Vanilla" could have been done by Lou Reed early in his solo career, and would have fit well on his self-titled debut, or even on Coney Island Baby. But it's all Hersh: as the guitars swirl, an acoustic keeping rhythm with Narcizo's kit work along with a psychedelic wobbly, distorted, and time-warped lead line, she sings: "You messing with my head makes a terrible noise." "The Thin Man" is one of those tracks, a ballad that cannot be described. Its poetic and compositional acumen are irrevocably linked, two terribly mismatched lovers rolling together in a dance of starvation and obsession. Learn to Sing Like a Star was certainly worth the wait, and if fans will listen closely enough, they'll understand that Hersh's sophistication as both a singing poet and composer has grown almost immeasurably. It defines whatever brilliance is these days -- it's necessary, and it's a carefully crafted yet compulsively delivered gem. As far as pop music goes, it should not be passed up by anyone who has ever felt that whatever happens underneath the skin is driven by the pitted, pitiable, scarred, and shape-shifting heart.

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