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Kevin
So
Leaving the Lights On
label: Wingbone
our score: 3.0 out of 5.0
here |
True story:
I was sitting around at Bill's place, choosing discs to review,
and we started laughing our asses off over the lyrics to the first
song on this album, "Average Asian American," because
they seemed so, y'know, awful: "Though I eat bean curd and
wear my jade / You can rest assured I'm American made"? Whatever.
But then we decided to play the damn thing, and we stopped laughing,
because it was actually unexpectedly funky and smooth. So I grabbed
the disc (discs, actually, it's a studio double-album) and I ended
up pretty much liking it, in spite of one serious drawback, which
I'll get to soon.
Kevin So has
been kicking around the Boston music scene for a long time, as
much as I can gather, appearing on comps and putting out solo
records and gigging all over the place, but has never really broken
out of the Beantown Bubble as far as name recognition. But here
he comes in 2003, with 150 minutes' worth of original tunes, making
a strong bid for some national buzz.
And he deserves
it, y'all-Kevin So is an original talent with a big heart and
a love of all kinds of music. He's got a great husky versatile
voice that can move from folky ballads to funky workouts without
losing any of its sincerity or passion. And he plays most of the
instruments on the record, and wrote the songs, and all that,
so he's for real.
The diversity
of this album is its second-greatest greatest strength; "The
Loneliest Person in the World" sounds like something off
Prince's Emancipation, and it's followed by "If It
Were Up to Me," which could easily be an early Billy Joel
tune, and then we get a faux-Stevie/Marvin sexx jamm ("Tonight
and the Morning After") and a neo-soul tune with extra hornage
("Don't Blow It, Kid"). And that doesn't count the Latin
dance song or the blues song, both of which end up succeeding
because of the album's greatest strength, which is So's likeability
factor, which is very high due to his engaging voice and obvious
menschitude.
But the record's
greatest drawback is pretty huge: So is completely undisciplined
as a lyricist. Some of these songs have a tough-but-tender edge
to them that cannot be denied-"Stanley Chin" is a blues
song from the perspective of a businessman whose kids don't want
to follow in his footsteps: "Well my name is Stanley Chin
/ And I own a Chinese restaurant", and "New Day Begun"
has a great surprise ending that redeems the whole "hey,
son, get out of bed it's the first day of school" conceit.
But a lot
of these songs suffer from too much cleverness, or an inability
to distinguish easy choices and smarm from real songwriting. Some
of it is caused by So's mission to be the first important Asian
singer-songwriter-he doesn't know if he wants to confirm Asian
stereotypes ("Don't Blow It, Kid") or deny them ("Abacus
(You Do the Math)"). And then there are songs that are just
plain lazy ("When It Rains It Pours") or clichéd
("4th of July") or overly twee ("One Big Happy
Family").
I don't mind
the length of this record at all-hell, if all the songs were as
good and as passionate as "Streets of Chinatown" or
"Stanley Chin," it wouldn't matter a bit how long the
damned thing was. And I really like Kevin So's voice and his personality
and his taste in music (but, damn, too many sad Stevie ballads,
Kev, gotta work on that). But it's also about the lyrics, too,
for a singer-songwriter, and, overall, they just don't measure
up here.
14-Jan-2004
7:08 PM

If you
liked Leaving the Lights On... |
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Tracklist:
Disc
One
1.
Average Asian American
2. Flashback to 1982
3. New Day Begun
4. Henry
5. Short End of the Stick
6. Crush On You
7. Abacus
8. What Goes Around Comes Around
9. Somehow We Will Get By
10. Streets of Chinatown
11. I Had A Dream
12. Shirts n' Skinz
13. Not Alone
14. Mi Casa es Su Casa
15. When It Rains It Pours
16. Call It A Day
Disc
Two
17. In the Blink of an Eye
18. Lewnleyenterlewd
19. The Lonliest Person In the World
20. If It Were Up To Me
21. Tonight and the Morning After
22. Don't Blow It, Kid
23. Calm Before the Storm
24. Stanley Chin
25. End of Your Rope
26. Upstairs
27. One Big Happy Family
28. When I Come Home
29. Rainonconversation
30. Frank
31. Leaving the Lights On
32. 4th of July
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