Album Reviews

Dan Auerbach: Waiting On A Song

 

Dan Auerbach
Waiting On Aย Song
(Nonesuch)
Rating: 3 out of 5 stars

Itโ€™s safe to say that nothing in Dan Auerbachโ€™s extensive career so far will prepare you for Waiting On A Song. Not his work fronting the bluesy, indie rocking Black Keys since 2002 or his swampy side project the Arcs, not his production for a diverse set of artists like Lana Del Ray or the Pretenders, and certainly not his previous solo album from nine years ago that mined a raw, ragged Keys groove.

Nope, the ever restless and prolific singer/songwriter/guitaristโ€™s shift into mellow ’70s California pop seems to arrive from some other dimension, likely the Twilight Zone.ย While Auerbach has toyed with commercially-oriented music in the past, these ten short selections that barely break 30 minutes go full bore into a fizzy, almost bubblegum arena. Some songs wouldnโ€™t have sounded out of place on a Shaun Cassidy or Andy Gibb album your parents might have stashed away in the attic.

It starts out promisingly with the relatively spare countrypolitan bounce of the title track (co-written by no lesser icon than John Prine), that has an underlying darkness of looking/waiting for your creative muse to kick in as an artist with writerโ€™s block. So far, so breezy.

Then comes the thumping drums, schlocky strings, backing vocals, horns and errr Glockenspiel of the following โ€œMalibu Manโ€ that pushes Auerbachโ€™s lyrics into cringe-worthy simplicity (โ€œMalibu Man, isnโ€™t life grand?โ€) with overproduced music that seems like a snarky parody of what you might have heard on AM radio four decades ago. Ditto for the basic beat of โ€œStand By My Girlโ€ with its sing-along chorus of โ€œIโ€™m going to stand by my girl/ โ€™cause sheโ€™ll kill me if I donโ€™tโ€) and the super slick โ€œKing Of A One Horse Town,โ€ enlivened by guest guitarist Duane Eddy.

Even though this is unlikely to appeal to hard core Black Keys or Arcs fans, the songwriting effort (the sweet, sensitive โ€œNever In My Wildest Dreamsโ€ could have come from Burt Bacharachโ€™s pen) and detailed creativity of the arrangements is impressive, as is Auerbachโ€™s sheer gumption to jumping feet first into an unlikely style to yield a left field radio hit. Or might have 40 years ago … today thatโ€™s questionable.

The timing of this release, which appears just as summer 2017 kicks into gear, canโ€™t be coincidental. This is sun-roof open, beach blanket bingo music that slides down easily and doesnโ€™t demand much from the listener. But even if these tunes are frothy and calorie free doesnโ€™t mean there isnโ€™t plenty to enjoy here once you warm up to Auerbachโ€™s sincere, unsubtle approach.

And if his intent is to put smiles on faces with a batch of catchy, immaculately produced, bubbly retro pop ditties, well โ€ฆ mission accomplished.