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RonSexsmith
is a major contemporary writer/artist who has amassed asizable and
consistently enthralling body of work since making hismajor label debut
in 1995 with his self-titled album on Interscope,followed by such
eloquent musical gems as Other Songs (1997), Blue Boy (2001), Retriever (2004) and Time Being(2006).
Each has its own particular character but is connected to therest by
the overarching intelligence, impeccable taste and
understatedemotionality of this single-minded voice in the
pop-culturalwilderness. As one new fan put it in a comment on iTunes,
Sexsmith'smusic “wins you over with a silk punch.” Well put.
On his ninth album, the cagily titled Exit Strategy of the Soul(with
an emphasis on the last word of this provocative phrase),Sexsmith once
again brings a provocative new wrinkle to his expansiveaesthetic.
Informed but not entrapped by soul and gospel music,ornamented by a
Cuban horn section and his own gorgeously imperfectpiano playing, the
album achieves a sort of metaphysical dimensionwhile maintaining
breathtaking intimacy.
Working once again with Swedish-born, London-based producer Martin Terefe, who brought a burnished, Beatlesque lilt to Retriever,the
artist finds an unexpected sweet spot in a stylistic and thematicrealm
he calls “shadow gospel.” It's in full flower on such memorablesongs as
the horn-drenched “This Is How I Know,” the aching “HardTimes,” the
playful 'Brandy Alexander' (his first recorded co-writewith fellow
Canadian Leslie Feist) and the buoyantly humanistic“Brighter Still.” Exit Strategy
is framed by a pair ofevocative instrumentals redolent of Randy
Newman's film music,“Spiritude” and “Dawn Anna.” It wouldn't be an
overstatement to saythat these 14 songs not only encompass the gamut of
human emotions butdo so with psychological acuity and plainspoken
poetic grace.
The album finds Sexsmith at his most soulful—not
that he sounds likeAl Green. “I don't have that kind of voice,” he
acknowledges,unnecessarily. “'This Is How I Know' was the first song I
wrote for therecord,” says Sexsmith, “and it felt to me kind of like a
gospel tune.As I continued writing, I started getting this vibe that
there was aspiritual element to them. One song, ‘Poor Helpless Dreams,'
predatesmy first record; I tried recording it over the years and never
got aversion I was happy with, but lyrically it seemed to fit in with
thesenew ones. ‘Brighter Still' was lyrically very positive, and I felt
therecord needed that kind of song, which is sort of in a Bill
Withersmode.” He pauses for an aside. “I keep hoping he'll make another
recordsomeday.”
None of it was premeditated. “When Martin and I go in the studio, we don't want to repeat ourselves,” says Sexsmith. “Retrieverwas
a straight-ahead, '60-style pop album, and in a way this one iseven
more old-fashioned and rough. But the plan this time was to nothave a
plan. At the heart of it is some very questionable piano playingby me.
The last bunch of records have been mostly written on piano, butwhen
I'm working with Mitchell [From, the keyboard-playing veteran
whoproduced Sexsmith's three Interscope album's and the previous Time Being],I
don't really have the nerve to play in front of him. With Martin,
I'dplayed one song on each record on piano, but with this one, I
wasdetermined to track the whole thing on piano, because that's how
I'dbeen doing it at home, and at the core of the record, I thought
itmight be kind of cool to have an element that was kind of
unpolished,and have the other musicians play around that. So that
became thespringboard for the sound of the record, with me banging away
on thekeys.”
The spirit of spontaneity extended to the lead
vocals, although thisaspect, too, was unplanned. “Before the band came
in,” Sexsmithexplains, “ I would record each song with guitar and
voice, and thenwe'd get everyone in the room and we'd all play along to
that—that'swhen I'd be banging away on piano. I never thought we'd wind
up usingthe guide vocals, but when I went to New York to re-sing the
wholerecord, even though I was singing everything technically better,
theguide vocals had more personality. I still worried about it, but I
lovehearing Dylan records like that, where you can tell he's not
gettingtoo fussy about his singing, and I didn't want to get too
preciousabout it.”
The album was near completion at Terefe's
Kensaltown Studios inLondon when, out of the blue, the producer
suggested a trip to Cuba toadd a horn section. Though the players had
been used by Terefe on aproject with the Alex Cuba Band—Sexsmith even
sang a duet with thebandleader on one track—the artist was initially
nonplussed by theidea. But he'd had spent enough time in the studio
with Terefe duringthe course of their three albums together to trust
the producer'sinstincts, and so, with some trepidation, he went along
with the idea.He wrote a song on the flight to Havana—which became the
climactic“Brighter Still,” cut on the spot with a roomful of Cuban
musicians.
“There's certainly nothing Cuban about my music,”
says Sexsmith witha laugh. “When I heard the horn players running
through the first song,I was thinking it was over the top. But when I
heard the tracks back inNew York, I was really
excited; it was a whole other flavor,one that I've never had on a
record before. So it didn't make sense tome at first, but now it really
makes sense to me when I hear it.” Onceagain, Terefe's instincts were
spot-on—because in going to Cuba, they'dsomehow located Memphis circa
1968…and just maybe a half acre of heavenas well.
Here as
always, Sexsmith's priority is the song itself. “I want thelyric and
the melody to be as flawless as possible,” he says, “so I'malways
pretty critical of my own stuff. In general, I try to writesongs that
will stand up by themselves if I'm not there. My heroes arepeople who
could write all different kinds of songs. Lennon could writesomething
really powerful, and be really funny in the next song; Dylanthe same
way. I feel all sorts of things, and I want the songs to havedifferent
character traits.”
As he was writing the songs that would comprise Exit Strategy,Sexsmith
realized that what he was feeling was somewhat headier thanthe
psychological terrain he'd previously inhabited. “It was excitingin a
way,” he recalls, “because I was getting these lyrical ideas thatwere a
bit different for me; they were reaching for something. Iwouldn't call
it poetry or anything, but I was trying for somethingthat was a little
more poetic. And I think that was partly inspired bywhat's going on in
the world. There's something about writing on thepiano, too—it has more
of a gospel-y attitude, and it puts me in adifferent place.”
As
for his place in the musical universe, Sexsmith says, “Over theyears,
I've built it up to the point where I have a cult following, forlack of
a better term. I don't have a huge following, but for the mostpart
they're very into it. So that's encouraging, and that's really allyou
can ask for these days. When I got signed, I was already 30, so Inever
really expected to be filling arenas. I felt that what I wasdoing
didn't really fit in with what I was hearing on the radio. That'swhy it
always confuses me when I hear people saying, ‘Why isn't Ronmore
famous?' It's not that I think a breakthrough album is out of
thequestion, but it's such a mysterious thing. I mean, I just write
thesongs, and feel really lucky that I have a career.
“Recently
I was in this bookstore,” he continues, “and I saw thisgiant
encyclopedia of modern music. So I thought, ‘Hmm… I wonder…' Iopen it
up and, sure enough, there I am, right beside the Sex Pistols.So I
suppose I have made a mark in my own way. What I can honestly sayis
that I'm proud of every single song that's ever been on one of
myrecords. I'm not always proud of the production or the singing,
butthere's not a song that I couldn't play you now and not feel good
aboutit.”
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