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- <text id=93TT1255>
- <title>
- Mar. 22, 1993: Reviews:Music
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 22, 1993 Can Animals Think
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- REVIEWS, Page 74
- MUSIC
- A Series of Dreams
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By JAY COCKS
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l>PERFORMER: Daniel Lanois</l>
- <l>ALBUM: For The Beauty Of Wynona</l>
- <l>LABEL: Warner Bros.</l>
- </qt>
- <p> THE BOTTOM LINE: A producer turned performer takes an
- eerie, rhapsodic journey through American pop myth.
- </p>
- <p> If you know Daniel Lanois at all, it's probably because
- you've read the credits on such superb albums as Peter Gabriel's
- So (1986), U2's The Joshua Tree (1987) and Achtung Baby (1991),
- Robbie Robertson's eponymous solo album (1987) and Bob Dylan's
- Oh Mercy! (1989). Lanois produced, or co-produced, all of
- those. But, on current evidence, he did significantly more than
- run levels and read meters. Those albums share an occasional
- brotherhood of sound--hard, lovely, otherworldly--but more
- significant, they are each rounded with a dream, part funky and
- part fantastic, that makes them seep into the subconscious, then
- permeate the waking state. They are, in the title phrase from
- one of the splendid Dylan songs that Lanois produced, a Series
- of Dreams.
- </p>
- <p> Collaboration at this level, with this kind of intensity,
- imparts its own reciprocal coloration. If Lanois gave these
- disparate artists a certain sympathetic unity of sound, he took
- from them a kind of thematic restlessness and artistic
- recklessness. He then applied those qualities to Acadie (1989),
- his wondrous first solo album as songwriter, singer and
- guitarist. They are in even more abundant supply here. For the
- Beauty of Wynona--named for a Canadian town close to where
- Lanois grew up--has a tougher rhythmic core than its
- predecessor. The title track takes off on a wild excursion from
- ballad to jams-out jam to a kind of interplanetary raga that is
- emblematic of the entire album-length adventure. The sound is
- spooky, seductive and scintillating.
- </p>
- <p> With Daryl Johnson on bass and Ronald Jones on drums,
- Lanois has the benefit of the kind of rich rhythm section that
- can be both goad and guide. When a musical phrase or lyric
- passage threatens to send Lanois off into deep space, Johnson
- and Jones can pull him back; when he's revising tradition, as
- on Indian Red, a kind of New Orleans gumbo classic, they help
- him explore musical byways that can bring him home again along
- a brand new route. If Highway 61 ran past Cape Canaveral, Lanois
- would be singing at the crossroads.
- </p>
- <p> If For the Beauty of Wynona has a unifying theme, it's a
- kind of blind-alley search for love in a world that changes
- before it can barely be experienced. Still Learning How to Crawl
- takes this theme of sentimental education and extends it past
- the age of anxiety into a kind of perpetual present tense,
- where lessons learned lead only to renewed uncertainty. Death
- of a Train has a real undertow of prairie melancholy, and The
- Unbreakable Chain is a little like a Lanois echo of Series of
- Dreams, a rhythmic rumination on the elisions of fantasy and
- desire.
- </p>
- <p> Lanois' music is nowhere near as heavy, however, as what
- can be made of it. One of his great gifts--which he shares
- with all those luminaries from his production days--is a deft
- spirit and a light touch. He can rock out when he's of a mind
- and yet can capture, whenever he likes, certain fragile
- qualities that elude the rhythmic tonnage of most contemporary
- music. Lanois has a kind of tensile fragility: you can hear it
- in the uninsistent mesmerism of his voice as well as in the
- sorcery of his songs. He schooled himself with some illustrious
- teachers, but made himself unique. With Wynona, he goes straight
- to the head of the class.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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