Robert Christgau's Music Criticism Blog - Expert Witness - MSN Music

Bruce Springsteen/Madonna

Give the Arena Some

By Xgau Mar 27, 2012 5:26AM
Bruce Springsteen: Wrecking Ball (Columbia)
The first six tracks are all heavy irony shading over into murderous rage, with refurbished arena-rock to slam it home; it's perversely anti-political to lay any other interpretation on the opening "We Take Care of Our Own," which cites places "From the shotgun shack to the Superdome" where we‑-meaning the U.S.A. so many Americans weren't even born in‑-documentably haven't taken care of our own. It's protest music, damn right about moral abstractions rather than those finely limned characters good little aesthetes get gooey about, and for me a cathartic up. Second half's less of a scour, which the anti-political find a blessed relief and I find a forgivable nod to humanism and Clarence Clemons‑-
especially since the climactic "We Are Alive" is so vulgar as to assume that all America's oppressed will rise up from the grave they share. To wreak vengeance, y'think? They got a right. A MINUS

 

Madonna: MDNA (Interscope)

Forget the four "Deluxe" extras, not one of which except maybe the pretty little "I F***ed Up" improves on the updated '90s arena-dance power tracks of the first 43 minutes, although they top the deadly-dreamy closer "Falling Free" as well as the penultimate "Masterpiece," which begins "If you were the Mona Lisa . . . ." Granted, I could mock "Ooh la la you're my superstar/Ooh la la that's what you are" just as easily. But lyrics have never been where she showed off her gorgeous brains, and anyway, the 10-track mix I propose as an alternative goes out on a real song called "Love Spent": "Hold me like your money/Tell me that you want me/Spend your love on me/Spend your love on me." Nicki Minaj shines bright, but she's no more crucial structurally than the cheerleaders who garnish "I'm Addicted" at its close and embellish "Give Me All Your Luvin'" throughout. Play loud. She's smart and she's proud. A MINUS

 

164Comments
May 5, 2012 9:33AM
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'Wrecking Ball' is a superb, though not optimistic, album from America's greatest rock 'n roller.  Bruce remains this country's most sincere, passionate rock artist, and he's always one of the first to respond to our collective national conscience.  He did so after 9/11 with 'The Rising', and he's doing so here.  What I find so ironic about the music on this album is its contrast to the lyrics -- the music is often uptempo, and sounds like stuff you would hear at an Irish wake.

 

Let's face it -- this country's been going steadily downhill since Reagan was elected in 1980, and any working man should find his thoughts and emotions addressed here.  The songs should sound fantastic live with the E Street Band. 

Apr 25, 2012 9:50AM
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Another thing I felt was that the entire set seemed like non-singles from many of her previous albums, more like 'Great Madonna non-singles collection'. I don't think her album may sell so well (and it isn't) because there isn't even one commercially-acceptable single in it. My dad (who is a sucker for catchy songs with indelible hooks) found MDNA boring because he couldn't sing along in the first listen, and though I said it grows on you after a few listenings, he didn't budge and changed to horrible hindi remix songs. BTW, the only one he would have loved had he been in the car while it was playing is Gimme All your Love because of its braindead lyrics but catchy hook.  

 

 

Apr 25, 2012 9:39AM
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MDNA is predominantly clustered with Euro dance beats that made me forget I was listening to the same Madonna I got accustomed to in her past attempts. The Material girl does away with her deeper vocals until Love Spent, where her voice sinks to bring in the maturity. In fact, it is that womanly tone that made some of her work stand out: 'Live To Tell', 'Shoobie Do', 'Deeper and Deeper', 'Bedtime Story', 'Human Nature', 'Swim', ' Drowned World...', 'Skin', 'Future Lovers', 'Let It will be' and 'Miles Away'. Her girly twitter on the other hand has given us many classics too, but that was when she was a girl. The fifty plus dame sounds nagging when she complaints about other girls' vanity in 'Some Girls' and sounds desperate to sound fresh at times.

 

Still, the record deserves the A- it has received, and I had predicted this long before Christgau had officiated it. The tracks, because of the Euro dance music, seem tad dated (as if it is a version prior to the actual studio version, had a similar feeling with Robyn's latest album) but they can be played over and over and over and over... no die b... sorry got carried away! **** is wicked, I'm Addicted can make you drunk, Turn up the Radio is great for the car, Gimme All Your Love is mediocre when compared to the remix by LMFAO, and the William Orbit finishers (right from I'm a Sinner to Falling Free) are a level above the rest. A brilliant observation by Mr. Christgau regarding the bonus tracks is that they seem like a respiting catharsis after Falling Free's climax.

 

   

Apr 17, 2012 10:24PM
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Wow -  I think Christgau is about the best music critic ever but I've rarely disagreed as much with a pop review as this!  First, the review itself is poorly written and he only seems to given a cursory listen to this album by the biggest pop star of our age.  This sounds like PR copy and not objective criticism,which, alas, is what more and more pop music criticism these days!  Also Madge's songwriting/lyrics are often one of her more underrated talents (and they actually shine here on the slow songs.)

But otherwise aside from a few high moments here and there and a handful of decent tracks much of the rest of the album falls flat. With no strong pop songs a la "Hung Up," "Music," "Vogue," "Live to Tell," etc. I predicted that this record would plummet after the first week.  I'm a lifelong fan but I honestly don't feel she can hack it as a dominant pop act any longer. The world has moved on I'm sorry (no one except NYC gay clubbers will disagree...) but Lady Gaga and Katy Perry are now calling the pop music shots. 

Few people care or sympathize much with the personal drama that Madge vents on "MDNA." The most famous pop star in the world who has enough money for 10 lifetimes,  three beautiful children and parades around with hotties half her age is not going to get anyone crying with her about her own bad personal decisions. One songs like "****" she comes off as whiny and even slightly nutty. The Madonna era is over though her amazing pop legacy will live on and on. She came and she conquered the world but her time is soon passing. 



Apr 3, 2012 8:38PM
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Fall Of Eleven is on their way..!!! A young teen band from Jackson Michigan..!! Keep your ears plugged in... Rock on..!!! \m/
Mar 30, 2012 3:22AM
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I'm listening and re-listening to this album over and over now, and, I have to say, I am hearing the A minus in it now--musically (it's in the melodies, which is what I thought was missing, not politics). Still don't think it's that great, but I'll carry on...
Mar 29, 2012 9:36PM
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The tug of war over whether Wrecking Ball is distinct or vague has troubled me since The Rising.

I think I've finally broken it down for myself to two sets of questions --

1. Does he always have to name names (Wendy, Mary, Kitty, Sandy, Leah, Sonny, Outlaw Pete, The Chicken Man [yep, there's a real person]) so as not to be accused of being generic? Is the possessive pronoun "our" truly insufficient when it is used in a line as clear as "They destroyed our families’ factories and they took our homes"?

2. Is it categorically impossible to "limn" moral concepts? Speaking of The Chicken Man, in "Atlantic City" Springsteen said, "Everything dies baby, that's a fact/But maybe everything that dies someday comes back" and nobody had a conniption. I happen to think that "There ain't no help, the Cavalry stayed home" is a clear and distinct call to arms, backs, hearts and minds, in other words, to rev up the human engine of democracy. If we don't do it, nobody's going to do it for us. That is not vague.
Mar 29, 2012 9:01PM
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Album reviews for April.

http://bit.ly/H1H761
Mar 29, 2012 7:21PM
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Yes, I know artistically is a wishy-washy word that doesn't come close to delineating why Bruce was better when he was younger, but it's what I had at the moment. 
Mar 29, 2012 5:30PM
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brad, the main character in "Working on the Highway" might have dreamed of a better life, but in the end he's up locked up, just like the guys in the two songs that surround "Working on the Highway". For all sorts of reasons I love the Bruce of the first 15 years and have little use for the last 25, but I don't know that the fatalism of the "regular" guy of those years is any more "real" than his current writing. He just wrote and performed it more artistically, which made it feel more true.

Mar 29, 2012 4:54PM
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Although Bruce has given the thumbs-up to Occupy, there's a disconnect between him and (many? most?) on-the-ground protesters that I think limits the album's effectiveness as protest. His romanticism turns every manual labourer into John Henry, and that in itself isn't a bad thing - it shows we've regressed in the time between "Working on the Highway", when a dude with a shovel could dream of something better, and today, when the JOBS Act on Obama's desk has nothing to do with infrastructure or stimulus but instead contains something called the Private Company Flexibility and Growth Act. But consider one central concern of the current crisis: debt. Springsteen had more to say on this on "Atlantic City", finely limned characters and all, than he has on all of Wrecking Ball. I'm grateful that at least one Boss has my back, yet I don't know how much I'll listen to this album.
Mar 29, 2012 4:05PM
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Hey Jody Rosen! 

A few exceptions that I think probably prove your rule about Bruce not writing good abstract protest songs: "Land of Hope and Dreams" and "American Skin" (which of course takes off from the murder of Diallou but does it's work on a non-narrative level mostly--and which he dedicated to Trayvon Martin in Philly the other night).

And if we can include his introduction to ("blind faith in anything will get you killed") and performance of Edwin Starr's "War"--a staple of the live show for a couple of years, well then...

Mar 29, 2012 3:56PM
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Milo: Perfect call on Joan Armatrading.  I can still remember surveying the crowd at a concert of hers (1983, Pier 84 in NYC) and seeing this sea of women--many in couples--and having this fleeting moment of understanding something about subcultural community.  In my relatively benighted and narcissistic late adolescent state, it was a good lesson about being in a crowd that had not been convened with me in mind.   

And interesting to think about all this in the context of Bruce's career.  Many before me have noted how for a good portion of his career he has alternated between superstar moves and conscious efforts to scale back: Nebraska kicks this off, disbanding the E Street Band, Tom Joad, Seeger Sessions, that weird cabaret-style tour in arenas behind Devils and Dust, the record with Joe Grushecky, and so on. 

But also in how he goes on the road into these giant (and once upon a time Giant) stadiums for years at a time and then comes back to NJ and plays the Stone Pony and Holiday shows and reconnects with Southside Johnny, and John Eddie, and Joe Grushecky and now Willie Nile and Garland Jeffreys and Jesse Malin and so on.   (And yes, to answer an old question of Bris Piggy's--it's a man's, man's world.  Bruce's masculinist, heterocentric worldview--see his recent Rolling Stone inteview--has been a challenge for many of us for years.  How thrilling when his video for "Tougher than the Rest" included a gay couple in the scrapbook of images!).  He struggles on and on with that "got what he wanted and lost what he had" dilemma more publicly than most rock stars--while never seeming to doubt that the mass audience is what he wants. 

Interesting also, in this context, is that Greil Marcus--who has written more than once about that the thrill of the moment when a subcultural or small-scale artist meets a mass audience--should have loved Nebraska so much and hated Born in the USA almost equally.
Mar 29, 2012 2:57PM
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 It's just that surely one pop usage is sound reproduction itself, no?  If we could agree to that, then Springsteen's notion that "the genie got out of the bottle" when Elvis danced on the Ed Sullivan show was not quite the causal agent he makes it out to be (to invoke that Keynote again). And needless to say, I'm more interested in all those other pop usages -- and how they're altered under their new conceptual regime.

Man, I'm sorry, but I can't respond to this because I can't quite figure out what it means.


Fame and stadiums are not for everybody. The pressures of success had at least something to do with knocking Peter Green off the rails, for instance. And I was just thinking the other day what a wonderful performer Joan Armatrading could be and how she intentionally cut back the career-building until she was comfortable with the pace and scale.


But I also offer up two cheers for superstardom to counter the pervasive (and I think mindless) notion that we would all be happier in a country where the music industry was 10,000 cottage industries and every musician ran their own career or settled for a hobby that paid for itself. Sounds too much like folks who claim everything would be dandy if the USPS withered away.

Mar 29, 2012 2:11PM
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jody -- just read your review and i liked it a lot.  good analysis i thought and very funny.  of course, i like xgau's a lot too.  need to listen to wrecking ball more to know who's i agree with most.  unfortunately i didn't have any definitive positive gut response to the music or lyrics first listen like i had Bruce's earlier records.  but maybe this one will come on slower.  although i think this one was meant not to, which makes me think it won't click like it's supposed to.
Mar 29, 2012 1:17PM
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Bob: I don't know whether to be relieved or offended that you weren't dissing me. In any case, I agree with you about MDNA.
Mar 29, 2012 1:06PM
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Jody: For the record, I didn't read your review. Metacritic seems not to recognize your existence (just as it rarely recognizes mine), and with a few exceptions I used metacritic to get the lay of the land. A few of the Brits were especially dumb, Caramanica merely willful as he too often is.


Mar 29, 2012 12:24PM
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I'm on the fence regarding WB. Some of the anthems are pretty cringe-worthy (I prefer the political rage of Magic, which had a better beat), but let's face it--good or bad, morally abstract or finely limned, the guy's a complete cornball, and always has been. You either make your peace with that or you turn it off. I've made my peace with it, because he's also a complicated guy and a rock and roll natural. I love the sound of the new record, which is crisp and clean and without the usual E-Street clutter. And I always look forward to a Bruce album without Little Miami Sylvio Van Soprano. (And hey, there's a guy who can write big political anthems--too bad he can't sing them)

Mar 29, 2012 12:08PM
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I, actually, half agree with you, Jody; Xgau can be a little arsey in the wrong areas. Myself, I don't think WB is bad--in fact, it's his best in years--but it's not good enough to buy and listen to on a daily basis, IMO. But, hay, I'm a heretic! This gooey business makes out, that Xgau can insult, even people he may agree with, and exempt himself from it--a little immature, in my books; maybe, I'm wrong.
Mar 29, 2012 11:43AM
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One correction: in the penultimate sentence of the penultimate graf below I meant to write: "Try to name a REALLY GOOD big rousing morally abstract Springsteen protest song." A song in that mode that stands with Springsteen's best, I mean.
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about the blogger

Robert Christgau

Starting in 1967, Robert Christgau has covered popular music for The Village Voice, Esquire, Blender, Playboy, Rolling Stone, and many other publications. He teaches in New York University's Clive Davis Department of Recorded Music, maintains a comprehensive website at robertchristgau.com, and has published five books based on his journalism. He has written for MSN Music since 2006.

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