Quick Review (LP): Mermaid Avenue II by Wilco (+ Billy Bragg)
October 16, 2011 Leave a comment
Wilco (+ Billy Bragg)
Mermaid Avenue II
Elektra; 2000
My Rating: C (54/100)
Best Tracks: "Airline to Heaven", "Secret of the Sea", "Remember the Mountain Bed", "Aginst th’ Law", "I Was Born"
TRACK NOTES
"Airline to Heaven" (4.5/5)
- Love the hoedown rhythm.
- The direction this tune takes is pretty genius. Sounds like it could’ve been an Uncle Tupelo cut.
"My Flying Saucer" (4/5)
- Cute n’ catchy.
"Feed of Man" (3.5/5)
- Sort of menacing, but ultimately forgettable.
- Tweedy should stick to the pretty stuff.
"Hot Rod Hotel" (3.5/5)
- Woody’s lyrics are pretty great, but musically this is below average.
"I Was Born" (4/5)
- Another cutey.
- I was never a 10,000 Maniacs fan, but Natalie Merchant’s super-pure voice really works well with Woody’s lyrics and BB’s tunes.
"Secret of the Sea" (5/5)
- LOVE this one.
- Power pop brilliance. (Must be Jay B’s tune
- "Who can guess the secret of the sea/If you can guess the secret of my love for you/Then we both could know/The secret of the sea…"
"Stetson Kennedy" (3/5)
- Meh…
- Sort of sounds like something I’d hear in the background on Bourbon Street.
"Remember the Mountain Bed" (5/5)
- While Bragg gets the upper hand in terms of authenticity, Tweedy wins in terms of gorgeous melodies. Witness this.
- Reminds me of the lovelorn nostalgia of "One by One.
- Great lyrics here.
"Blood of the Lamb" (3/5)
- Shoots for significance, hits on dull.
"Aginst th’ Law" (4.5/5)
- Yessir, it is.
- Why Winston-Salem?
- Catchy as heck. Fun. Great performance by Corey Harris.
"All You Fascists" (3/5)
- Yeah, Woody didn’t like Fascists either.
- Exceedingly average.
"Joe Dimaggio’s Done It Again" (3.5/5)
- I know it’s Woody’s work and all, but this sounds a bit out of place coming from Tweedy.
"Meanest Man" (3.5/5)
- Instrumentally compelling.
- Vocally, decent.
- In terms of the songwriting, blah.
"Black Wind Blowing" (4/5)
- Haunting.
- Picture listening to this one while a storm is rolling in on the prairie.
"Someday Some Morning Sometime" (3.5/5)
- Feels like it could have been a bit more…
ALBUM NOTES
- Well, they saved most of the winners for the first volume. "Secret of the Sea" is essentially perfect, a Wilco power-pop wonder. Otherwise, there’s not a whole lot that detonates.
- I wonder if they’ve ever given thought to continuing this series?
- There’s a good documentary about the recording sessions called Man In The Sand. You can watch it on Netflix instant (or, you know, buy it or something).
- Now that Wilco’s done this for two albums, it would be interesting to hear Jay Farrar/Son Volt give it a shot. After all, JF has always seemed to exude the blue collar heart.
ATTRIBUTES
Cohesion (4/5)
Concept (4/5)
Consequence (3.5/5)
Consistency (2.5/5)
Songs (3.83/5)