Andrew Bird's Noble Beast
February/22/2009 19:37 Filed in: Music
Noble Beast is Bird’s fourth solo album and it made its debut this past January as a live stream on NPR. While the melodic electricity from Armchair Apocrypha has been subdued, the inter-connected ambience laid out on Noble Beast is more clearly defined, and the scope of the album is decidedly more visceral than the esoteric meanderings of Bird’s prior work. Indeed, on Noble Beast, Bird has created a vivid landscape, layered by elegiac violin melodies and punctuated by pizzicato notes, plucked guitar and clip-clop percussion that is more approachable to the casual listener.
On a thematic level, Bird seems to struggle with the classification and taxonomy of the natural world. It’s probably little coincidence that Noble Beast was released right near the bicentenary of Charles Darwin’s birth. Bird elicits lugubrious and meticulous observations of the surrounding world, with scientific specificity and attention to detail as pertains to the rise and fall of species. On Souverian, he laments the inability of cyclical nature to overcome internal wounds. “while thistles will burn my feet / you promise spring, still my lover won’t return to me.” And on Anonanimal, Bird seems personally afflicted, even infected, by the evolutionary process. Singing of a sea anemone Bird predicts, “I will become this animal / anomalous appendages, anonanimal, anonanimal.” Evolution apparently comes with its own unforeseen casualties.
Stay tuned for pictures from tomorrow’s concert.
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