OPUSZINE.COM
Now The Day Is Over
Badman Recording Co. / BRCD-952 / 2004
I
don't think it should come as a surprise that the latest album from the
duo of Karen and Don Peris, better known as The Innocence Mission, would
essentially be an album of lullabies. Karen's voice is soft and wispy,
reminiscent of
Over
The Rhine's Karen Berquist minus the grit and edge, and Don's guitar
and arrangements are especially graceful and fluid. Together, they make
perfect music for drifting off, and one can easily picture the duo
playing these songs for their young children (which is actually the
case). In fact, one might even become a little jealous for not having
these soft songs are part of their own childhood memories.
Some
might raise their eyebrows at some of the track choices. But as the disc
continues, it becomes fairly obvious that the duo (along with upright
bassist Mike Bitts) are more than capable of stripping a song of any
preconceptions and cliches it may have gathered over the years and
making it seem fresh and new in the process.
For instance, their version of "Over The Rainbow" (a song
that's been forever altered for me thanks to
Save
The Green Planet). Karen's voice seems almost hesitant at times,
as if she's afraid that the answer to "If happy little bluebirds
fly/Beyond the rainbow/Why oh why can't I?" might be too hard to take.
And the version of "What A Wonderful World" on this disc is nothing
short of revelatory. Aided by lovely backing arrangements, the song
takes on a hymn-like quality a la "This Is My Father's World". When
rendered by Karen's voice, the hope expressed in a lyric such as "I hear
babies crying/And watch them grow/They'll learn so much more than I'll
ever know" simply sounds too good to be true.
Not all of the album's tracks are hallowed showtunes.
Breakfast At Tiffany's Moon River is transformed into a
skeletal piece of sparse piano and acoustic guitar, which only
accentuates the lyrics' longing. Don Peris showcases his deft playing on
two classical music renditions, Chopin's "Prelude In A" and Beethoven's
"Sonata No. 8", the latter having an especially deep, resonant feel to
it. And the band offers up their rendition of what is perhaps my
favorite hymn of all time, H.G. Spafford's "It Is Well With My Soul".
The hymn's charged words are all the more lovely wrapped up in Karen's
trembling voice, and there's a nostalgic hint to the piece, as if you're
listening to a Great Depression-era radio broadcast.
At times, the song selections might seem a little trite and
precocious. Heck, the same could be said for the album's concept. One
might expect this from the likes of Kathie Lee Gifford, not the
Innocence Mission. If you're a cynical bastard, chances are this review
has thrown up all sorts of red flags. But there's something terribly
disarming about the Peris' presentation. There's not an ounce of cheese
or pretense on this disc, but rather something approaching a hushed
reverence for these old standards.
Reviewed By
Jason Morehead
Posted 12/24/2004