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Ben Harper
Fight For Your Mind


4.0
excellent

Review

by Disco Donkey USER (15 Reviews)
January 25th, 2006 | 12 replies


Release Date: 1995 | Tracklist


What do you get when you cross James Taylor with Bob Marley? A goofy looking baby? Perhaps, but more importantly, you get Ben Harper. Chances are, you’ve heard at least one of his songs and you didn’t even know it. There was a commercial running a few years back from the Partners for a Drug Free America that contained the first few notes of Harper’s depressing "Give a Man a Home". I grew to hate that song because the commercial was played relentlessly on almost any TV station I changed it to. Fast-forward to a few years later…

I have recently been trying to expand my musical horizons beyond the hard rock genre. Over the past few months, the discs being popped into my CD player have changed quite drastically. No longer do James Hetfield and Gavin Rossdale consume the majority of space in my collection. I’ve moved on to, dare I say, softer music. Music that’s more appeasing to a headache. Sometimes a soft acoustic guitar and a gentle voice is just what I’m in need of, and the guy who delivers it with natural charisma is the aforementioned Ben Harper. Along with fellow folk-rockateer Jack Johnson, Harper has been filling the voids of silence in my life.

Though I still believe that commercial to be as whack as (or whacker than) crack, the song played in its background has grown on me since hearing it along with the other gems on Fight for Your Mind. And speaking of that PDFA commercial: don’t you think it’s odd that they picked a song by a man who openly admits, even on this very album, to smoking pot? Apparently, they were hoping kids would do as he said, not as he did. The most blatant references to his leaf-loving hobby are found on one of the best songs from this album: "Burn One Down". If this was the only song you heard from Mr. Harper, you would probably think he was Bob Marley’s long-lost son. Bongos, blunts, and a crackly voice means that a great deal of associations could be made between the two. Even their messages are similar. Here, Ben asks his listeners to see his hobby as a positive rather than a negative and to just accept it. “My choice is what I choose to do/and if I’m causing no harm it shouldn’t bother you.”

Besides sharing in Marley’s fondness of herb, he shares his views on society, which he tells us about in the opening track, "Oppression". The constant repetition of that word keeps us focused right on his message...oppression is bad! Very blunt (no pun intended) and very strong. When you put that message of anti-tyranny over a catchy acoustic hook, it makes you want to sing along in your car with the windows down and a megaphone pressed against your lips.

Some other highlights include "Ground On Down", which breaks away from the ho-hum acoustic repertoire to showcase some electric sensibilities. The first 50 seconds of the song is just pure distortion. No notes… just noise. But, thankfully, that gives way to a consistent southern-sounding riff that clings to your eardrum like herpes to Paris Hilton. The song makes constant references to God and the devil and how to get in good with the man upstairs, but at the same time relates it to his own relationship. It also delivers the best line on the album: “I have faith in a few things/Divinity and grace/But even when I’m on my knees/I know the devil prays.”

Ben quickly dips his hand back into the acoustic river to trickle some downhearted strumming back into his songwriting with "Another Lonely Day". The title says it all: he’s lonesome. This song is a lot like watching a dwarf trying to reach for a jar of peanut butter on the top shelf at a grocery store; even though it should be sad, there’s some part of you that feels better after listening to it. "Gold To Me" moves towards a much more upbeat, even happy, mood. It’s like taking that same situation in the grocery store, and having the jar of peanut butter fall off the shelf and right into that tiny pair of hands. It’s one of those songs that make you instantly bob around like an idiot. It’s probably the closest thing to country music you’ll ever hear me listening to. On the title track, "Fight For Your Mind", Ben takes that same kind of cheerful stride with his guitar and applies it to an even more positive message. He urges, “If you’re getting up/then take a stand.” It shares a similar message to "Oppression", but on this one he takes a more proactive stance. The aforementioned "Give a Man a Home" starts off a little shaky but gathers itself together for the chorus, which is the main highlight of the song for me.

Unfortunately, not all of the songs on this 14 track disc are gems. Some of them are pretty pedestrian, while others are borderline boring. "Please Me Like You Want To" has some very insightful lyrics on what it’s like to be in love with someone who just wants to be friends. Having been in a similar situation, his words hit close to home. Still, the music behind the words is just too bland to ever capture my full attention. The double shot of "Excuse Me Mr." and "People Lead" offers more on the general anti-“the man” theme, but gets crushed beneath lackadaisical musicianship. "By My Side" skips along the same trail provides a great chorus, but leaves the rest of it a bit iffy. I do like the inclusion of the organ, though. "One Road to Freedom" is Harper’s attempt at an epic closer, but it falls short thanks to some aimless drifting through parts of the song. I don’t think he realizes that time isn’t the only factor in what makes a song epic. Still, the song has enough solidly satisfying parts in it to justify its inclusion in the album. I just wish he had condensed it a bit.

I sense that Harper started to lose some steam towards the end of the album, creating two intensely boring songs back to back. "Power of the Gospel" is just plain preachy. I can’t even count the number of times he uses the word “gospel,” but I know that it’s far too many. It’s great to be a religious person, but that doesn’t mean you need to shout it out to the world, on a disc, every five seconds. It literally felt like Ben was grabbing me by the back of the head and rubbing my face into the holy genitalia of the Messiah. "God Fearing Man", while being less preachy, is more boring than watching milk turn sour. He should’ve disowned these two songs while he still had the chance.

But even though Fight For Your Mind ends on a dismal note, that doesn’t mean it’s not a good album. Most songs are above average and overshadow those that fall below the fault line. If this CD doesn’t have you bobbing along, it will have you in deep thought. And to me, that’s exactly what a man and his guitar should do.



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user ratings (133)
3.9
excellent


Comments:Add a Comment 
Zebra
Moderator
January 26th 2006


2647 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

This is a great album, I love 'Ground on Down.'

Nice review. It was very descriptive, well-written and lenghty.

br3ad_man
January 26th 2006


2126 Comments


Good review. I bought this album a while ago but I don't really like it.

Zesty Mordant
January 26th 2006


1196 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

Great review.

This is a fair album. It's got its great moments and others that are kinda bland.

Still all you need is his Live from Mars album (What happened to Tangy's review of that?)

diefamous
January 29th 2006


281 Comments


Honestly i havent heard the album.. but i love the song Burn One Down

masada
April 3rd 2006


2733 Comments


yummy

Two-Headed Boy
August 6th 2006


4527 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Power of the Gospel is a friggin' genius song.



Awesome cd. Ben's the man.

unretrovertigofied
November 29th 2007


232 Comments


Aside from 'Ground On Down' and 'Another Lonely Day', this album is a yawnfest. I was expecting this album to be really good, because I heard good things about Harper's guitar playing..John Butler as a guitarist smokes this guy.

Squamish
December 6th 2007


84 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Gad Fearing Man is amazingly. I go to sleep to it.

TREO5
April 13th 2014


1071 Comments


My choice is what I choose to do,
and if I'm causing no harm it shouldn't bother you.
And your choice is what you choose to be,
and if you're causing no harm it doesn't bother me.
If you don't like my fire, then don't come around
Cause I'm going to burn one doooooown.

deathschool
August 25th 2014


28621 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Long walks until I'm lost while listening to Ben Harper, and the night hits just right. Fucks with it. Fight for your mind.

grannypantys
June 20th 2015


2573 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

harper is the man

but sometimes on here he sounds just like a dirty hippy

deathschool
June 20th 2015


28621 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

This and Burn to Shine are his only truly excellent albums. I just wish he'd trim the fat occasionally, because I swear sometimes he sabotages himself.



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