Sunday, September 13, 2015

CD Odyssey Disc 781: Cake

I’ve had a hectic week, but things started to mercifully slow down over the weekend. Saturday night I was up late listening to tunes  and hanging out with fellow music enthusiasts all night. Today I settled down on the couch to enjoy the opening kickoff of the NFL season (made more enjoyable by a Miami Dolphins victory). Before I hit the sack, I’m going to get in a music review.

Disc 781 is….Fashion Nugget
Artist: Cake

Year of Release: 1996

What’s up with the Cover? A simple drawing of a crown. Would a crown be a fashion nugget for a king?

How I Came To Know It: Sheila introduced me to Cake (and to this album in particular). Around 1999/2000 she used to work at a clothing store that played cassettes of music in the background. One of the cassettes had a couple of Cake songs, including “Perhaps, Perhaps, Perhaps.” Sheila’s coworker told her the song was by Cake, and so Sheila bought the album and introduced me to the band in the process.

How It Stacks Up: We have seven Cake albums which I believe is all of them. Of the seven, “Fashion Nugget” is one of my favourites. I’ll put it second overall.

Ratings: 4 stars

As bands grow into themselves they can sometimes over-complicate the very things that made them great to begin with. That’s likely why for a lot of bands they never outdo their first album. “Fashion Nugget” is Cake’s second album, but it still has the simple brilliance of an early career record.

The basic structure of their music in 1996 was essentially the same as it is now; a concoction of R&B and funk rhythms, indie pop and traditional crooning Sinatra type stuff. However, “Fashion Nugget” feels more raw and stripped down. This starkness to the sound gives it an emotional depth. I like the more smooth flow of later albums as well, but as early Cake goes, “Fashion Nugget” is as good as it gets.

The energy of the album is best expressed on “The Distance” which is one of the great driving songs of all time. The song has an insistence that demands the reckless speed of an American muscle car. In addition to being a great driving song, it is also a clever exploration of why we metaphorically keep racing long after the race is over.

Cake seems obsessed with cars, on this album and many others as well. In addition to “The Distance,” “Fashion Nugget” also features “Race Car Ya-Yas,” and “Stickshifts and Safetybelts.” Cake has a conflicted reaction to American car culture. “Race Car Ya-Yas” is a dirge about idiot street-racer types and “Stickshifts and Safety Belts” is a rockabilly number that celebrates the romantic side of that same culture.

The album also has a fun remake of the Gloria Gaynor disco classic “I Will Survive” which is every bit the equal of the original, and may be better if only because Cake better captures the bitterness of the song’s lyrics.

The band has already mastered using trumpet flourishes to accentuate their rock and roll sound. It is a great reminder that it is the trumpet that is the companion horn to rock and roll, not the saxophone.

On this listen I noticed that “Sad Songs and Waltzes” has a little trumpet jazz interlude where they riff off the melody from “Perhaps, Perhaps, Perhaps.” It was a great way to tie some of the musical themes on the record together, and also a timely reminder that jazz interludes only work when you know the song that forms the basis of all that noodling.

Cake are masters at writing a memorable lick that sounds like it has been around for decades, and yet keeping that sound new. They are very clever songwriters, but do it in a way that doesn’t rub your face in it

The album is tastefully restricted in the same way, with 14 songs and 48 minutes of music. That does push the edge of responsible pop music making, but it is still significantly on the right side of the line.

We played “Fashion Nugget” a lot when we got it, and I think because of that I don’t pull it off the shelf as often as I should. Getting to spend some time with it over the last couple days reminded me it was time to reacquaint myself with it.


Best tracks:   The Distance, Stickshifts and Safetybelts, I Will Survive, Perhaps Perhaps Perhaps, Nugget, Italian Leather Sofa, Sad Songs and Waltzes

No comments: