Lost Cause (album)
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- For other uses of the phrase, see Lost cause
Lost Cause | ||
Studio album by Jandek | ||
Released | 1992 | |
Recorded | Unknown | |
Genre | Blues/Garage Rock/Pop Music/Outsider Music | |
Length | 43:13 | |
Label | Corwood Industries | |
Producer(s) | Corwood Industries | |
Jandek chronology | ||
---|---|---|
One Foot in the North (1991) |
Lost Cause (1992) |
Twelfth Apostle (1993) |
Lost Cause is the twenty-first album by Jandek, and his only of (1992). Corwood Industries release #0759, it marks the end of the "electric phase" and, really, of an era. It features a little of all the styles on the previous twenty albums, and ends with a nineteen minute, amps-to-11 freakout called "The Electric End."
Contents |
[edit] Overview
Lost Cause dropped in 1992 to a cult of followers still trying to figure out just who this "mystery man" was. After seven fairly uniform acoustic albums, the last fourteen albums had been all over the spectrum, from the crazed garage rock of Telegraph Melts to the acoustic heartbreak of Blue Corpse to the bluesy lounge rock of the Living End. Sometimes there were female vocals, or a male vocalist who obviously wasn't the original performer. What it all added up to by this point was hard to say.
It's not a stretch to say that Lost Cause attempts to sum up, then encore, the artist's career up to this point. It begins with a loungey voice and electric piece called "Green and Yellow" that reflects much of what was on the last album, One Foot in the North. That leads to a pop song that could come off one of the early 70's Beach Boys albums - "Babe I Love You" is straight pop for the summer, including what sounds like a pump organ providing the pedal points and gorgeously played acoustic guitar (by someone, it seems safe to say, other than the Corwood Representative). The lyrics almost seem of a piece with the pop until you listen closer and catch phrases like "Look outside/genitals/baby I love you/’cause I’m fast."
The next three tracks continue this folky aspect, with "Cellar" being another ode to the "Randy" who died in "Alehouse Blues" (some of those lyrics are repeated, and expanded on), while "How Many Places" and "Crack a Smile" threaten to fade away into the overmodulated whispers (just listen, if you wonder what that means) of the microphone.
Then another switch. Gone is the "standard" guitar and in comes the slow pick familiar to listeners of the early acoustic albums. "God Came Between Us," in fact, is the most VIOLENT song Jandek's had in a while, as far as vocal delivery goes. This leads to another despairing, oddly tuned acoustic blues which praises - quite sincerely - Jesus "coming in the morning," before the original first side was out.
The nineteen minutes and thirty nine seconds of "The Electric End" are truly both an endurance test and a load of fun. The song employs two guitars (both playing fairly standard phrases), some off-rhythm (but INTENSE) drums, an occasional scream (at one point the artist screams "when is this gonna end" like he was about to fly to pieces), what sounds like a maraca and, oh yeah, squealing feedback, the kind you get when you hold a guitar pick-up over a microphone. it blasts along until everybody seems to give up the ghost and the song abruptly ends. Many assumed (again) that this may be the last Jandek album, and in some senses it is. From here the bands would disappear until the live gig in October of 2004, while the plethora of releases between this one and Glasgow Sunday find Jandek exploring a surprisingly wide amount of styles (and instruments, or lack thereof), but almost entirely going it alone.
[edit] Track listing
- Green and Yellow – 4:10
- Babe I Love You – 4:13
- Cellar – 1:48
- How Many Places – 3:03
- Crack a Smile – 3:09
- God Came Between Us – 3:33
- I Love You Now it's True – 2:59
- The Electric End – 19:39
[edit] Album Cover Description
Color snapshot of head and shoulders of Boy Jandek, looking about 17 although it's hard to tell, wearing a plaid shirt and standing in front of a curtain (apparently Jandek's liking for drawn curtains is of long standing). His hair is cut conservatively short, the only such photo of him (although he looks a little older than the Follow Your Footsteps cover guitarist, who clearly hadn't had a haircut in quite some time). -- Seth Tisue
[edit] Reviews
Side one has 7 non-datable tracks of depressed blues-destroying ramble... Early optimism on the opening tracks transmutes into full desolation by the closing hack-gulps at the end... “The Electric End” is a nineteen-plus minute excursion into frothful extremes. Piercing electro-search guitar, revolutionary ultra-primitive drumming, lost-mind vocalism of real cracked creation and some sort of high end squeal (a penny whistle?) combine in an incredibly wasted fashion.
-- Jimmy Johnson Forced Exposure #18