

Matraca Berg, The Dreaming Fields
Lady Gaga, Born This Way
The third album from pop’s poker-faced ingénue isn’t quite
album-of-the-decade deserving, as the star herself claimed it would be, but
dear Gaga, it’s gotta be the gayest. Gaga’s message of self-love in the face of
adversity isn’t just part of the Born This Way emancipation proclamation, on
which she celebrates all kinds of queers with kitschy ridiculousness that only
Mother Monster could pull off. She does it again on the surging "Hair," her
mane weirdly a metaphor for freedom from oppression. Those songs, and almost
every other club anthem on this very gay gospel of Gaga, come at you like a
wrecking ball: big beats, bigger vocals and concert-made credos of liberation,
religious or otherwise, that never let up. The vagueness of "The Edge of Glory"
does it a favor, reflecting some of the cheesy best of ’80s pop with its
totally ambiguous narrative and second coming of the sax. "Scheiße," with
mock-German jargon and techno sheen, could be the theme song for a Brüno sequel
(couldn’t you just see him doing the catwalk to it?); the aggressive "Bad Kids"
is dirtied up in a hard-edged melody that’s also sweetly endearing for all you
naughty rebels. But all’s not tip-top: "Americano" is a second-rate
"Alejandro," and "Marry the Night" probably works better live. More moments
like "Bloody Mary," an easy-going song about a bad romance, would be a welcome
reprieve from the exhausting anthems. Ultimately, Born This Way is strong
enough for the everyman but made for the monsters. Two paws up.
Grade: B
Matraca Berg, The Dreaming Fields
Blessed with a sterling voice, it’s a wonder we haven’t
heard more from Matraca Berg in the last 14 years. That’s how long it’s been
since the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame inductee, who typically works
behind-the-scenes and has written hits for such country heavyweights as Martina
McBride and Reba McEntire, released any new material of her own. Thankfully,
the wait is over. One of the best albums of the year, Berg’s Dreaming Fields
is mellow singer-songwriter music for the soul, mirroring legends like Emmylou
Harris and Carole King with stellar writing and Berg’s voice – a mellifluous
sound that knows how to get lost in a song. When she poignantly recalls
pre-suburban pastures on "The Dreaming Fields," you wanna go back in time; when
she mourns the death of a loved one on "Racing the Angels," you wish you could
bring that person back. Given her songwriting credits, none of it’s that
country – even with a song title as Southern-cooked as "Your Husband’s Cheating
on Us," a saucy number about a two-timer, the breather in the set. The rest of
Dreaming Fields is built on intense emotions of nostalgia and heartbreak,
mourning a relationship’s imminent end on "Clouds" and escaping an abusive one
on "If I Had Wings." "A Cold, Rainy Morning in London in June" closes this
marvelously moving album on just piano and strings – and if there were any
doubts that Berg should be a bigger deal, this is the song to change that.
Grade: A-
Also Out
Brad Paisley, This Is Country Music
For as big of a country superstar as Brad Paisley is, he
sure doesn’t act like it. More than ever his latest LP casts him as the dude
next door, where his sign-of-the-times songs – about unemployment ("A Man Don’t
Have to Die") and sweating the small stuff ("One of Those Lives") – are right
in line with his image. The title track is awkwardly self-congratulatory, but
one of the better songs on the album. All in all, though, this one’s no
American Saturday Night, his last LP. But it’s not a bad way to spend the
rest of the week.
Ford & Lopatin, Channel Pressure
It’s back to the future for this Brooklyn electro duo,
formerly of Games. Glitchy synths and spastic drum machines – both which fold
into greatness on "Too Much Midi (Please Forgive Me)" – take center stage
during the production team’s space-rock opera, a conceptual story about their
teenage years. It’s a long one, dragging out the musical ADD just a few songs
too much, but some of the ’80s-drenched throwbacks – especially "World of
Regret," a stuttery whomp rhythm with electro squiggles and fluttery vocals –
are as fantastically old-fashioned as cut-off shorts.