Album Reviews

Bob Forrest: Survival Songs

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Bob Forrest
Survival Songs
(Six Degrees)
Rating: 3 out of 5 stars

West Coast musician/frontman/ex-heroin, cocaine and alcohol addict Bob Forrest is likely better recognized as a celebrity drug counselor working with Dr. Drew Pinsky in the Celebrity Rehab and Sober House TV shows than as a talented singer/songwriter. But Forrest, who once fronted post-punkers Thelonious Monster (where he dueted with Tom Waits on a track) and was also the subject of a full length documentary Bob and the Monster, has gradually, tentatively returned to music. He released a 2006 album and follows that nearly a decade later with the riveting and appropriately titled Survival Songs.

Featuring Forrest on unplugged acoustic rhythm guitar with assistance from ex-Circle Jerks guitarist Zander Schloss, the stripped down songs retell the harrowing days during and after his addiction, admitting in โ€œCereal Songโ€ that he has teeth he canโ€™t chew cereal with, and stating โ€œIโ€™m lucky Iโ€™m alive/ I should be dead.โ€ Itโ€™s the ultimate โ€œlost weekendโ€ tale told in 13 songs sung with a scarred, scorched intensity that cuts to the emotional core. Occasional additional instrumentation ranging from a sad, lone trumpet in โ€œLooking to the Westโ€ to stand-up bass, pedal steel and producer Ian Brennanโ€™s โ€œodds and endsโ€ brings this devastatingly personal material to life.

There is an immediacy to the performances and Forrestโ€™s quivering voice that make it clear heโ€™s not only a survivor but is convinced things will improve, a concept he defines on the colorfully named โ€œLena Horne Still Sings โ€˜Stormy Weather.โ€™โ€ In the closing โ€œTruth, Chaos and Beauty (Peace in the Valleyโ€), he concludes with โ€œkindness is everything and love is all there is,โ€ perhaps sounding clichรฉ on paper but sung with such naked conviction, it seems like a revelation.

Clearly this is not a set for the squeamish. But Bob Forrest tells his tales from firsthand experience and that raw, unadulterated, unfiltered honesty is what makes Survival Songs such a spellbinding, mesmerizing if slightly uncomfortable experience.