Orphans 5 Star Mojo Review!
MOJO REVIEW – December, 2006
Rag and bone man - Dylan? Dickens? Rembrandt? Shakespeare? A 21st Century beggars’ banquet…so says Mat Snow.
Tom Waits Orphans: Brawlers, Bawlers And Bastards (Anti) ***** (5-stars)
“Instant Mojo Classic”
TWENTY-FOUR rarities dating back to 1985 plus 30 new songs mixed up in three loosely ordered CDs, evoking the filthiest Southside steam-punk blooz-stomp, the purest mountain air, gallows laughter and the redemption promised in the whistle of the gospel train. Masterpiece isn’t the right word for such a profusion of profound delights; for an artist as much seen as heard through his various film, stage and art collaborations, exhibition is better. Best of all, though – given Tom Waits’ relish in the most cobwebbed curios, crotchety contraptions and dustily baroque sounds and speech – is junkshop. That’s certainly how the sleeve itself pictures this astounding collection. More even than his Exile On Main St., this is Tom Waits’ Basement Tapes.
With room to spread out, Tom Waits is not just unbuttoned but unchained. By contrast, this album’s three predecessors – Blood Money, Alice and Real Gone – sound narrow, even forced. To doubt that an album containing Ramones covers, the Peggy Seeger-sung folk ballad Two Sisters, the 1953 Sinatra hit Young At Heart plus originals ranging from backwoods sinister to topically passionate could possibly hang together is to forget that Tom’s victory of style over substance is actually a singularity of vision rather than an artist’s egotism. With his unfussy brushstrokes, umber hues and humanely honest delight in warts and all, he is the Rembrandt of modern music.
When Tom Waits sings a song, it grunts, sighs, chuckles and above all breathes. Though only sporadically seen on stage nowadays, Tom Waits on record does not smell of dead studio air but smoke, booze, sizzling valve amps, Naugahyde banquettes, frying onions and wet dog. His vision is that of Dickens and Shakespeare, where the world’s a stage and we are theatrical turns. Decay hunts his songs almost as much as Dylan’s (he is one of Bob’s “secret heroes”), but Waits celebrates rather than mourns the span between hatch and dispatch that teems with dreams and disappointments. From barstool to boondocks, Waits memorializes and revivifies an American before and beyond suburban flight. If Tom’s clock stopped around 1955, it’s perhaps because he shares the artist’s commonplace that the spirit withers when pushing a lawnmower. His work is a crowd of loners aching to tell their story.
Hardly a song here does not merit an essay, but Road To Peace may well prove a protest song for now, that like Dylan’s The Lonesome Death Of Hattie Carroll, outlives the moment. Loud and direct, Waits steps out of character to hammer out the one blood-soaked news story after another from the Israeli-Palestinian ‘conflict’ and, as an American appalled at his country’s support of the slaughter, roars with mounting despair at the cruelly pointless inhumanity of it all. In an amazing album, it’s an amazing song. There are 53 more where that came from.