Suffering Jukebox, Such a Sad Machine
Thursday, June 26th, 2008Silver Jews - Lookout Mountain, Lookout Sea

B’Ezrat Hashem: The words are Hebrew, and they mean “with God’s help” or “with the help of the Name.” You will find those words on the liner notes of the new Silver Jews album, Lookout Mountain Lookout Sea (Drag City), immediately below the dedication to Jeremy Blake, the artist who committed suicide last year by walking into the ocean. Now, I know some people are weirded out by the fact that David Berman has a newfound faith in (a) God, but you really shouldn’t act so surprised. The faith may be new, but the yearning for it isn’t, and anyone who doesn’t believe me can go throw American Water on the stereo and skip to track five. “The meaning of the world lies outside the world,” Berman declaims on “People.” Clear enough for you? Or how about the chorus to “Long, Long Gone (on the Tennessee EP)?” “Oh Lord, please come down from the mountain,” David and Cassie Berman croon slash plead, “some of us are broke and having problems.” The line is obviously intended to be funny, but where you find the humor—in the presumptive “irony” of a direct-address to God, or in the jaw-dropping understatement that “some of us are…having problems”—says at least as much about you as it does about Berman. Put it another way: when a man’s talking about—or to—his God, the assumption that he’s kidding comes at your peril, not his (or His).
What we’ve got here is not a newfound interest in seeking, but rather a long search which has—in some sense—come to its end: the sought-after has been found. Of course, as Berman sings on the very first track of Lookout Mountain, Lookout Sea, “when failure’s got you in its grasp / and you’re reaching for your very last / it’s just beginning,” and I see no reason why what’s true for failure shouldn’t also be true for triumph. Apocalypse equals rebirth, ergo rebirth equals apocalypse. This notion of conjoined and convoluted beginnings and endings, births and deaths, informs pretty much every song on LMLS, even the goofy “Aloyisius, Bluegrass Drummer,” the totally baffling “Candy Jail,” and the marvelous “San Francisco B.C.,” a new entry to the Jews‘ small but remarkable catalogue of story-songs. (See also: Bright Flight heartbreaker “I Remember Me,” and the vaguely Lovecraftian vagueries of “Farmer’s Hotel” on Tanglewood Numbers.) “San Francisco B.C.” is a twisted pomo-noir in which cops and robbers and punks and barbers chase each other around the foggy city. The wacked-out detective romance unfolds over the course of six delightful minutes of rapid-fire Bermanisms: “since her dad, a local barber, had been beaten to death / she had become a vocal martyr in the vegan press.”
LMLS is a moody, weird, high-minded gem with choruses that dare you not to sing along. It’s good country music and it makes me love being alive. To all remixers, DJ’s and other arbiters of taste: if “Party Barge” doesn’t become the breakout dance hit of this summer, there’s something wrong with all of you.
Justin Taylor (www.justindtaylor.net)

















