From
a Basement on the Hill shatters Elliott Smith's myth
The
late Elliott Smith's From a Basement on the Hill is a very great album by ÐÐ why not? ÐÐ a very great man. A textbook example of creative wholeness and a
virtual primer on structural and orchestral ideals in a rock context, it
fulfills several terms for greatness: It moves us with so many stratums of
emotion particularized and peculiarized; it constantly startles with distinct and
fresh views about the very shape a song can be; and, having done both those
things, it continues to evolve, paying enormous emotional and psychological
dividends the more you give it your time.
Now, to induce the
typically religious mood that proclamations of Rock Greatness encourage:
Why did Smith's death have to follow his magnum opus (for it now seems as
if predestined)? The answer, I think, is that we weren't meant to know why.
In fact, that we aren't meant to know about Smith's true motivations,
sorrows, joys, etc. ÐÐ or his real anything ÐÐ plays like a theme on Basement. So if you are wont to glean
more about this funny sad/not-sad little man, Smith's last obfuscation-confessions
will only further provoke your frustration, your enticement and, of course,
your fascination.
But here's the harsh
part: Elliott Smith hid himself quite on purpose, despite your personal connection
with him and his troubled life and troubling music ÐÐ in spite of any and all your deep
love. Smith kept himself hidden because ÐÐ harsher still, but you'll thank
me in the end ÐÐ you have to understand that he was a JUNKIE. Oh, he may
have sworn off heroin toward the end, eaten healthy food and applied
himself to his work, but by the end he had required a literal suitcase full
of medications and scotch to even himself out to the point where he could
function as a human on the most basic levels. Nevertheless, he still would
have carried with him to any ultimate end the banalities of a junkie's
mind; he would have done what all junkies do, which is to focus so
ferociously on themselves that anyone in close proximity has to die at
least a little bit too, and that's regardless of overt displays of affection,
loyalty and truth telling.
A junkie's animal
devotion to no one other than himself often produces a kind of charisma,
for a particular kind of needy audience of which there is currently still
no shortage and most likely never will be. For deep beneath the junkie's
hide reigns a sober repose toward which the insatiate crowd is drawn...like
moths to a flame.
Junkies,
alcoholics and narcissists, all eventually must face the immutable law of
diminishing returns, an inevitability that will determine the specific
period in their lives when the drugs or booze or the physical
beauty/charisma are usable and useful, and what precisely must be
accomplished during this relatively brief interval. Elliott Smith knew this
far prior to his death, and deliberately framed his From a Basement on
the Hill as
the chronicle of his death foretold. Yet perhaps most interesting about
this particular book of doom is its distinct lack of long, dreadful minutes
of agonized introspection or indeed anything remotely resembling a view
that death is anything other than one of the more beautiful parts of life.
These songs, while all
mottled with scars and scribbles, much like the artist's face and body, one
and all feature a kind of weirdly upbeat forward motion. It's a forward motion
toward death, yes, but if the strange whims of the arrangements and
structures of these works strike you as evidence of a kind of willful
self-destruction, several spins (and Smith's own explicit lyrical
confirmations) make more obvious a ubiquitous calm; one senses a palpable
joy (better, something approximating joy) in Smith's knowing his destiny. The album is
characterized by the sound of his relief that the worst and hardest part ÐÐ
staying alive, proving his points, perhaps ÐÐ is over.
It's the sound of
finally released pure expression, a purely musical point Smith proclaims
over and again throughout this sonically far-reaching album. The wretched,
wrenching chaos of warped string damage launches the opening "Coast to
Coast" into the set's characteristically fantastic chord changes (better
chords in unusual sequences are a truly progressive rock move that Smith
understood like almost nobody else in pop), then bumps atop a bridge/chorus
leaping jaggedly up the steps: It's "Aaaahhh aaahhhh ahhh aaahhhh haaaa
whooo whooo" and pianos tinkling too, but "It just wasn't that much fun,"
he says, and "I'll never be good enough for you" and, cut to the chase,
"Just leave it alone/just forget it/it's really easy/I'll just forget it
too."
This is some really
uplifting garbage, like he's hauling the trash upstairs to empty it out the
window. "Let's Get Lost" is an acoustic-guitar number, not just with solo
warbling, but accompanied by harmonizing womanly warble at tail ends of key
lines; these brief shades of harmony are daubed in like stippling, only to
hint at the ways a single note placed just here can utterly mangle what we
thought we were feeling.
Such adroitly
idiosyncratic orchestration (and a lot of appropriately inscrutable
engineering effects) anoints the entire disc with a specialness pretty much
unheard of in the general pop realm. These songs are genuinely melodic (by
that I mean melodically unclichŽd), and so shrewdly arranged with a
deliberately limited palette that their odd dimensions never suffer from
incoherence or veer from very direct impact. Occasionally, as with "Pretty
(Ugly Before)," whose beguiling, hovering suspended chords become something
much more straightforward, you fear he'll become Tom Petty, but then you
remember something Dad once said: These guys aren't roots-rockers, not mere
new folkies. What Smith was was the reincarnation of John
Lennon,
musically if not spiritually...and I do wish Lennon's late-period work was as
good as Smith's.
The Beatles fix seems
unavoidable in "Don't Go Down," texturally Plastic
Ono Band/White
Album Lennon all over, a dermabrasively romantic overdrive guitar sound and
intermittent implied transition chords. ("Baby stay," he says. Need we be
reminded that there's beauty in huge wads of fuzz. Smith, instead of dying,
could've made an itchy sweater out of the collected lint of his gray/blue
washed-up life.) "Little One" is, let's face it, McCartney's "Michelle"
inverted, but Smith, via some initially unfathomable chord changes that
keep you guessing where it's going and what its intentions are,
demonstrates a very high form of songwriting/composition, as if its
vagaries of direction are the immediate output of a modem from his head. On
"A Fond Farewell" to himself ("I couldn't get things right...This is not my
life, it's just a fond farewell to a friend"), the geeks'll say the
slide-guitar soloing is ever so too George Harrison, but anyone but a total
churl would have to agree that it fits the song as if born to play the
part. "King's Crossing," too, eerily echoes "Blue Jay Way" in the sustain
guitar intro, as it would in any of us partaking of the collective psyche.
Typically, and
appropriately, "King's Crossing"'s heart-tugging piano patches are run
roughshod over when singer Smith chimes in from a far harder place, as if
to repeatedly temper any perceived bathos. Could be significant, as we're
reminded again and again that he apparently wanted to keep this music as
non-traditionally sentimental as possible. Yet simultaneously he'll seek to
soften the hardness; showing distinctly musical instincts (his or his
producers'), the additional big, messy sound painted on "King's Crossing"
with churchy organs, string synths and harmony vocals bespeaks an ironic
"ain't life great" even as it urges any listener to not give up grasping at magic.
This
is where the greatness lies: I think that Elliott Smith just got to the
point when he could really hear> something. That's a very fragile and evanescent state, if
you're not a craftsman, which he wasn't. He was an artist, and that's why
for him almost nothing was ever good enough. The leathery beauty of Smith's
melody is the most beautiful kind of all. Not just Smith but these
sympathetic producers/engineers really went for it, and you can hear it
plain as day. I only know what's been reported, that Elliott wanted this to
be a double-disc set, ˆ la the White Album, warts and all. I do think that
whoever made the final choices and sequencing did a good job. I think it's
possible that cuts were necessary to strengthen the impact of the work as a
whole, made by someone with better judgment than the artist himself in this
case.
This is rock music, undoubtedly,
and it bashes its way into your heart the way rock likes to do. But it's
not just your heart it wants. And it's not like a fuck you, and neither is
it a desperate plea to be understood. And as the last song, "A Distorted
Reality Is Now a Necessity To Be Free," makes clear, thank you and good
night, From a Basement on the Hill ends just in time, having said everything it
needed to. No, he would never have topped it, ever again. Yes, I do think
the drugs and liquor helped him get to that rarefied air he needed in order
to hear these songs, and to carry them through ÐÐ to execute them. Because they're so
beautiful, not in a heartbreaking way, but in a destiny way, a
gauntlet-throwing way. And in a look man, how's your petty life? kind of way.
Like this: I can see my death, and it's glowing gold, so close, so far away.