Butch Walker Sycamore Meadows
  full reviewuser ratings (48) 
Tracklist:
1. The Weight of Her
2. Going Back/Going Home
3. Here Comes The...
4. Ponce De Leon Ave.
5. Ships in a Bottle
6. Vessels
7. Passed Your Place, Saw Your Car, Thought of You
8. The 3 Kids In Brooklyn
9. Summer Scarves
10. A Song For The Metalheads
11. Closer To The Truth and Further From The Sky
12. ATL

Ranking: #33 for 2008

user rating
4.1
excellent
Chart.

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  On 19 Lists

5.0
classic
Dave de Sylvia STAFF (188 Reviews)

2008-11-04 | 80 comments | 5,682 views

Summary: Tragic events inspire Butch Walker to make his best album to date.

Politics, politics, politics. It’s all very important and all, but is there anything more important than a breakup record?

There’s an old lie that says all great art is begotten by tragedy. Like most lies, it’s not true, but it’s in times of great personal tragedy that we most need great art; which is why albums like Blood On the Tracks and Jagged Little Pill will always possess an importance that goes way beyond their aesthetic value (in Jagged Little Pill’s case- what aesthetic value?). Add to that the fact that most musicians are basically masochists, and it’s easy to see why some would grow to be particularly good at it. One such artist is Butch Walker, who has made two, possibly three, great breakup records, the latest of which is Sycamore Meadows, his first studio release as an independent artist.

When we last touched base with Walker, on 2006’s The Rise And Fall Of Butch Walker And The Let’s Go Out Tonites, he was busy critiquing Hollywood from the inside, through the eyes of a country boy and rock n’ roller embroiled in the glitzy, sordid surreality of LA’s elite party scene. As you do. Late last year, however, his life in LA came to a dramatic halt when bush fires in Malibu burned his rented condo to the ground, destroying almost everything he owned and every master tape he’d ever recorded (meaning no long-lost Marvelous 3 rarities!). Amid this chaos, he appears to have suffered a relationship crisis of some sort- either he was at breaking point or very close to it- and it was this clusterfuck of emotions that gave birth to Sycamore Meadows, the best single record of his opinion to date.

Sycamore Meadows is heavily informed by Walker’s fire experience, but the specific themes are far more relatable: stories of heartache, loss and loneliness, along with the obligatory scene critique (for good measure.) Musically, there are no huge surprises: the general mood of despondency recalls the Marvies’ hidden masterpiece Hey! Album; the shift towards acoustic instruments and more subtle arrangements brings to mind his 2004 album Letters; and there are a couple of glam rock nuggets in the form of lead single ‘Weight Of Her’ and the brassy ‘Ponce De Leon Ave.’ He experiments with new instruments and styles just enough to make the familiar sounds fresh. ‘Ponce De Leon’ is primed to explode with funky latin horns, while ‘Summer Scarves’ rests upon a sweet, melancholic oboe melody that could have been plucked straight out of a classic film score. His debut solo record Left Of Self-Centered experimented with hip hop and electronic styles, but often came across as awkward as it was well-intentioned; Sycamore Meadows is a far more accomplished effort- an extremely well-polished and well-drilled pop-rock record.

Walker’s songwriting trademarks are all present and correct, from fast-moving character-driven narratives like ‘Weight Of Her’ and ‘Going Back/Going Home’ to more direct and physically moving numbers like ‘Passed Your Place, Saw Your Car, Thought Of You’ and ‘Here Comes The...’ ‘Weight Of Her’ recalls ‘Bethamphetamine (Pretty, Pretty)’ from the last album, driven by a strong acoustic guitar motif and a verse melody that calls to mind Elvis Costello at his explosive best. ‘Going Back/Going Home’ also has a cousin from the previous record in bluegrass ditty ‘Rich People Die Unhappy’; this time he weaves his own experience of losing his home with a compassionate account of a woman caught between an abusive husband and a son that needs a father. He even manages to rap- fairly well! Closer ‘ATL’ is a semi-autobiographical account of a man’s struggle to find his place in a world of limited options: ”Atlanta please need me, like I needed you / ‘Cause I’m suffocating, like some people do, and I need your air to survive.”

For the second album in succession, Sycamore Meadows features guest vocals by pop singer P!nk, who appears on album highlight (and potentially Butch’s best ever creation) ‘Here Comes The...’ She doesn’t add an awful lot to the track- she’s only there to provide colour- but what she does she does well. Sitting on top of a funky acoustic guitar groove, the lyrics perfectly capture the fear and helplessness that is felt when a relationship seems to be on the road to collapse: “Here comes the heartache, the move out day, excuses for my friends / here comes the reasons I have to justify, ‘it was better in the end’ / here comes the last time I’m gonna kiss you and the first night sleeping alone / here comes the hardest thing we’ve ever known.” Walker muddies the waters a little bit by working in a fire metaphor (”you can’t lose a fire when there’s nothing left to burn”), but whatever its inspiration, the dread and latent despair that it invokes is unmistakeable. Similarly, ‘Passed Your Place, Saw Your Car, Thought Of You’ could easily be Hey! Album’s ‘Let Me Go’ revisited ten years on, tracking the singer’s descent from moderate self-pity to eternal, irreparable heartache.

A couple of lighter, more breezy numbers help break up the album’s emotional heaviness towards the end: ‘3 Kids In Brooklyn’ is Walker’s tirade against New York City and its indier-than-thou scene kids, with lines like ”[she’s] working at American Apparel, selling women’s clothes to guys”, while little explanation is needed for the inspiration behind ‘A Song For The Metalheads’: ”[they] throw rocks but [they’re] not rocking, and stand there just mocking / with hands in their armpits but they'll later smell / when you live in the past, there’s one thing that will last: resentment that time won't sit still”. But Sycamore Meadows is an album that was born from heartache, and it’s on its saddest and most visceral numbers that its creator truly shines, and perhaps gives some validity to that old lie about art.

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Comments:Add a Comment 
marksellsuswallets
Contributing Reviewer


Comments: 4228
11.04.08

Album Rating: 4

clusterf[size=]u[/size]ck
hmm...

Digging: City of Ships - Look What God Did To Us

Dave de Sylvia
Moderator


Comments: 6856
11.04.08

Album Rating: 5 | Sound Off

Good call :cool:

Digging: Natasha Bedingfield - Pocketful of Sunshine

marksellsuswallets
Contributing Reviewer


Comments: 4228
11.04.08

Album Rating: 4

Now that that's out of the way...I've never been much for Butch Walker but I suppose I should at least look into this album...been on a singer/songwriter kick as of late...

beans


Comments: 2184
11.04.08


heard a lot about butch so i've been wanting to check some of the material out, this will inspire me to download some material.

great review dave

Digging: Those Who Lie Beneath - An Awakening

AtavanHalen


Comments: 8547
11.04.08


Some excellent writing here, Dave.
You know, for all your praise of him and your insert of news and streams and stuff, I've never actually listened to him. I think I may now.

Digging: Biffy Clyro - Only Revolutions

redskyformiles
Contributing Reviewer


Comments: 5832
11.04.08


Such a good album. I like Letters more atm but this is still growing on me.

Digging: The Mars Volta - Frances the Mute

planewreck
Emeritus


Comments: 2981
11.04.08


well now this just isn't fun 8(This Message Edited On 11.04.08

Digging: Animal Collective - Fall Be Kind

Dave de Sylvia
Moderator


Comments: 6856
11.04.08

Album Rating: 5 | Sound Off

Yes extremely insightful point Lewis. Thanks.

AtavanHalen


Comments: 8547
11.04.08


He's good like that

Jom
Staff Reviewer


Comments: 1901
11.04.08

Album Rating: 5

oh shit moving up an entire star for classic status

Digging: Saves the Day - Stay What You Are

iamrockzorz


Comments: 1013
11.04.08


Okay, honestly. Good music from the few songs I've heard. But meriting classic status is pretty crazy for this imo.

But to each his own!This Message Edited On 11.04.08

Digging: Touche Amore - ...To The Beat Of A Dead Horse

Poet


Comments: 3821
11.04.08

Album Rating: 4

It's Dave praising Butch Walker, what a surprise.

lol just kidding. Great review, can't wait until I hear this.

Digging: Gunther - Pleasureman

AggravatedYeti


Comments: 1079
11.04.08


Good review, but
I dont know...

Digging: A Sunny Day In Glasgow - Ashes Grammar

AtavanHalen


Comments: 8547
11.04.08


It's Dave praising Butch Walker, what a surprise.

They're bffl

DaveyBoy
Staff Reviewer


Comments: 5826
11.04.08


Fantastic review Dave. Well done.
Although, if I can be a little cheeky & re-quote you from your comment on my "I'm Not Dead" review:
"It's generally not a good idea to introduce new information in your conclusion."
:-)


Digging: Paloma Faith - Do You Want the Truth or Something Beautiful?

Jom
Staff Reviewer


Comments: 1901
11.04.08

Album Rating: 5

He didn't?

Dave de Sylvia
Moderator


Comments: 6856
11.04.08

Album Rating: 5 | Sound Off

haha actually the only thing that could really be considered a conclusion is the final sentence, but I could probably could find a more elegant way to finish the review. I'll think this over.

Skyler


Comments: 836
11.04.08

Album Rating: 3.5

a 5? wow, i have to check this out now

Digging: The Orb - U.F.Orb

kmagnum1x


Comments: 205
11.05.08


I knew who was writing this review and what the rating would be before I entered

AtavanHalen


Comments: 8547
11.05.08


You're good man



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