Listen Up: Wednesday, January 28, 2009
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A D V E R T I S E M E N T
A D V E R T I S E M E N T
The Fireman

Electric Arguments
(Capitol/EMI Records)

By Justin Press

It’s taken 46 years for Paul McCartney to finally enter a blue(s) period. His new side project, The Fireman, starring über-producer and ex-Killing Joke bassist Youth (just one name, kids), has been in operation since the early 1990s. Most of the project’s output has been ambient and semi-classical in nature, with no vocals. Electric Arguments, however, reinterprets The Beatles’ Lennon-led excursions as swampy vamps, all sung and all sung by McCartney. Imagine The White Album as done by The Black Keys — that’s The Fireman’s Electric Arguments, a hipster blues record with just enough tender moments to remind you that this is the guy who wrote “Yesterday.”
Other than the doomed longing of “Traveling Light,” the record is pure 4/4, with stomped pianos and harmonica throwdowns. Sir Paul’s voice hasn’t sounded this good since the early 1970s. Check out “Two Magpies” and “Highway” as shining examples of Macca’s newly honed, gravelly voice and also his attention to phrasing, placing him somewhere between backporch Mississippian shaman and English manor gypsy. “Singing the Changes” is pure Traveling Wilburys — his fellow Beatle George Harrison’s stamp is all over the tune: serene, detached vocals delivered in an echo chamber no doubt as deep as one of Brian Wilson’s hallucinogenic drug holes.
Maybe it’s just a coincidence, but a majority of Arguments’ tracks mirror old Fab Four stands: “Sun is Shining” follows up “Here Comes the Sun,” “Magpie” is “Blackbird,” and so on. But the twists don’t end there. “Don’t Stop Running” finds McCartney aping the very band that made its living aping him: Oasis.
Electric Arguments can be seen as either just a charming piece of tuneage or a major entry in McCartney’s canon. What is not in doubt is that the legendary singer-songwriter still has a lot of gas in the tank. Dinosaur rock? No, not quite. The album simply recalls a time when rock and blues were still in their honeymoon phase, always a good thing.


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