eMusic Review 0
XO, Elliott Smith's first album on Dreamworks, fell several leagues short of a Grand Statement. Instead, it saw his music easing fitfully, and self-consciously, from the low murmur of his indie records to, at most, a sort of uneasy throat-clearing. The production values were sharpened and improved slightly — his finger-picked acoustic guitar rang out with sharp clarity, and the pits and crags in his wobbly little voice were paved smooth. And for the first time, there were big, new sounds on an Elliott record — the Beatles dancehall oompah of "Waltz No. 2 (XO)" and "Baby Britain", for instance.
But Smith brought the foul emotional weather of his early music into the expensive studio with him, and it makes XO fascinating and uncomfortable. The lyrics to "Everybody Cares, Everybody Understands" slap away the hands of anyone expressing concern for his well-being: "Everybody cares about you, yeah, whether or not you want them to/ It's a chemical embrace that kicks you in the head/ to a pure synthetic sympathy that infuriates you totally/ and a quiet lie that makes you wanna scream and shout," he mutters.
This moment — a guy muttering about wanting to scream — sums up the emotional tenor… read more »