2021-05-19

MATT BERRY - THE BLUE ELEPHANT (REVIEW)

 

For Matt Berry’s newest album, The Blue Elephant, he’s gone and popped the lid off of a veritable Pandora’s box of 1960s psychedelic influences and turned himself into the proverbial “kid in a candy store”, filling his basket with a plethora of tricks and treats, threatening to over-indulge at every turn, yet somehow managing to keep it all from becoming a mess. The neatest trick here is that he’s managed to invoke the essence of that sound without resorting to overt parody or homage. It’s all very authentic sounding from the brutal stereo panning to the swirls of phaser that periodically send the mix into the stratosphere. The man simply knows the ins and outs of what he’s doing with this style and has managed to expertly craft this album to create a transcendent journey that swirls, shimmers and seduces while never succumbing to hubris or arrogance.

It’s a pretty slick maneuver considering the kinds of characters Berry is famous for and the bravado of the material being executed. Doing psyche-rock effectively requires a degree of confidence that isn’t burdened by overt egotism. The magic of this genre is when you can lose yourself in it and Berry has meticulously fashioned a trip worthy of the finest state altering substances. To accomplish this, he’s woven a few different tangential styles together that stretch the theme just enough to foster the unexpected. As well as the classic psyche tropes, there are also facets of early 1970s progressive and glam rock that refract through his musical kaleidoscope, adding to its depth and range.

The structuring of this album is impressive on just about every level, beginning with the overall arrangements. There’s a broad range of dynamic variations, unexpected shifts and intricate transitions that unfold seemingly spontaneously with organic ease without sounding contrived or overworked. It’s a very freewheeling sensibility that instills the album with an innate sense of fun, even when the lyrical content is somewhat melancholic. You can simply hear the joy in Berry’s process as he puts this all together. Atop this prowess for putting things in the right place is an artful palette of sounds which service this conceptual framework to its maximum potential. Guitars jangle & fuzz, tremolo modulated keyboards and organ riffs glide in and out, flutes drift on high and heavily processed voices find the strangest nooks and crannies to occupy.

While Berry is responsible for the bulk of everything you hear, including mixing, engineering and production, there is one other contributor to this tapestry that deserves special commendation and that is drummer/percussionist, Craig Blundell, a regular collaborator with Berry. His performance on this album is the secret sauce that makes all the magic Matt weaves around him sound fluid and dynamic. Craig’s got his finger on the pulse of this album from start to finish and the interplay between him and Matt is some kind of sorcery that leaves me marveling at how tightly entwined they remain from track to track and transition to transition.

While there’s a very carefully contained maximalist approach to the music on this album, lyrically, Berry has gone in the opposite direction and kept his phrasing down to a bare minimum. There aren’t any elaborate verses or pronunciations atop these songs. Mostly the lyrics are suggestive or nearly fragmentary, leaving room for interpretation or bemusement. When he sings, “It’s a drag to be set on fire” in Now Disappear, it’s a surreal kind of implication that is never elaborated upon and merely hangs there in the breeze of the tune. It’s vocal impressionism, which highlights the overall painterly quality of the album. It doesn’t feel composed at all, but rather expressed through brush strokes and the lyrics are there to give the music just enough contextual grounding to give the listener a foothold while not tethering them entirely to the earth.

The world of actors who make music is rife with self-indulgence and musical careers which should never have left the privacy of hobby land. It’s very rare that a stage/screen performer is able to muster a convincing career in music, but Matt Berry is an exception where his talents in both fields seem to be equally matched. I’ve seen some fans of Berry’s screen work strain to imagine him as a “serious” musician, but it’s clear that he’s more than capable of laying claim to both professions with equal conviction. He’s now got over 20 years and at least a dozen albums behind him to prove it. This latest may well be his best yet!

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