village voice
RSS/Podcast feed for Village Voice News Status Ain't Hood
The All-Dirty Edition
Popped! Music Festival
Enter to win a trip to this year’s 3-day POPPED! Music festival in the Philadelphia, June 20-22nd!
Vlada Lounge
Enter to win a $50 gift certificate to Vlada Lounge!
Alice Smith
Enter to win tickets to see Alice Smith on Thursday, May 22nd at the Highline Ballroom!
SoHo Stroll 2008
Enter to win a SoHo Stroll 2008 broom signed by James Blunt and designed and decorated by the New York Academy of Art!
Elia Salon
Enter to Win A Hair Package Special by the BEST DOMINICAN SALON for you & a friend!
Lit Lounge
Enter for complimentary admission to see Power Solo from Denmark with Band Antenna, Sea That Dried Up, and Chem Trail at Lit Lounge!
United Artists
Enter to win a 90th Anniversary United Artists DVD prize package!
Iron & Silk
Enter to win 5 personal training sessions at Iron & Silk Fitness!
Music
American Music Club's The Golden Age
Reformed miserablists turn their self-contempt on the world
by Franklin Bruno
February 19th, 2008 12:00 AM
American Music Club The Golden Age Merge

Pretty rich title for a band assumed to have peaked with 1995's Mercury, its ambitious major-label debut. The following year's too-many-cooks Francisco led to American Music Club's demise, triggering a decade of sometimes rudderless solo work from songwriter maudit Mark Eitzel (a covers album, older songs backed by traditional Greek instruments, etc.). 2004's full-band return, Love Songs for Patriots, audibly substituted ProTools for a real production budget; wisely, The Golden Age is less mediated, its variety achieved through smartly arranged curveballs like the Calexican waltz "I Know That's Not Really You." Now based in L.A., this is also a less democratic AMC: In honorableWest Coast fashion, the current rhythm section, borrowed from Echo Park combo the Larks, serves as foil to what raises this outfit above most singer-songwriter vehicles: the interaction between Eitzel's long-lined melodies and open-tuned chord-cycles, and guitarist Vudi's way with a signal chain. The textures of "Decibels and Little Pills" (country, the way that gay bar in Basic Instinct was country) and "On My Way" (a Kevin Shields whiteout) are no less alchemical for being exactly what the faithful have come to expect.

Speaking of what you'd expect, Eitzel's mind can't help wandering back upstate, with San Francisco appearing by name in two titles here. But the most arresting songs cast a wider net. "The Windows on the World" memorializes pre-9/11 NYC though a tourist's-eye-view of the World Trade Center's 107th-floor bar ("I'm on top of the world with a free beer"). And in "The Dance," a woman's fling with a soldier who "shakes his moneymaker without the safety on" ends in slaughter. Echoed by Vudi's acrid solo, the scale of Eitzel's contempt for military unaccountability is evident: "When you say the right words, your uniform is clean." The best reason not to write off AMC just because this isn't their golden age? It's not ours, either.

Add a Comment

Not ? Login as a different user.

All reader comments are subject to our Terms of Use. By submitting a comment, you acknowledge that you have reviewed and agree to these Terms of Use.

Login or Register

Login or register to have a chance to win Free Stuff, subscribe to newsletters and much more!

Login Register
Mark on Tue Mar 25, 2008, 14:28, says:
Hey Franklin - Thanks for this - I kind of love a 'Vudi's way with a signal chain' because - he certainly does have one!

The Village Voice Ad Index
The Village Voice Summer Guide 2008

» click here to see more...

The Village Voice Summer 2008 Education Supplement

» click here to see more...

The Village Voice Spring Arts Supplement

» click here to see more...