Published on Jun 25, 2003
“Sunday was always Pancake Day in our family, because that was
the day we’d all drive up to Pancake Mountain, and then maybe on
the way home, stop and get some pizza. We’d always sing the same
song, too, on the way home. It went like this: ‘There’s nothing
flatter than a pizza, nothing you can make. The only thing that
might be flatter is a fish they call the hake!'”
Reading this random, irrelevant quote from my favorite
absent-mind on the planet, Jack Handey, I immediately was reminded
of Tim Keyes’ new CD
Sketchbook. The quote is like the CD in that it made me
laugh in puzzlement, wondering, “Who in the world would think of
something like this?” To answer that question pertaining to the
quote, I responded quite emphatically, “A genius, that’s who! God
bless this man!!” However, when I pondered this same query after
listening to
Sketchbook, I answered in yet more puzzlement, “Uhhh, I
guess Tim Keyes would.”
The first song on this album (besides the intro-a bunch of
people talking) is called “Higher Ground.” It is four minutes,
seventeen seconds of straight out empowering, inspirational garbage
that actually makes me feel considerably under-zealous. I guess
maybe it’s the drum machine, “rocking” electric guitar and
keyboard-organ undertones that drag this thing all the way “under
ground.” Moving on to number three, “Gain The World,” starts off
unpleasantly with a sound that is reminiscent of tin cans shaking
around, and I swear a guitar riff they sampled from my old Casio
keyboard. Also, “you are a seed that won’t grow, the doomed that
don’t know/you are a hand caught in a grinding wheel turning very,
very slow.”
Man, I don’t know. I just really don’t.
Oh yeah, “if I could paint the rain the color of my
disappointment, I would paint you.” Yeah, in a way it makes sense,
but I guess you’d have to hear this song (number four, “(If I
Could) Paint The Rain”), to understand my frustration. Towards the
end, the tempo slows down, and the bells-and-chimes beat changes
to, like, African drums and a rainstorm.
The thing that makes this CD the most unbearable is the sound of
old Timmy’s voice. It actually sounds a lot like Bruce
Springsteen’s, but Tim probably wanted to distinguish his pipes
from The Boss’ by taking classes in “How To Make Your Voice Like A
Creepy Uncle’s Or The Voice Of A Guy Who Asks You If You Have Seen
His Dog While Driving Around School Bus Stops In His Dirty Geo
Metro.” Because, that’s really what his voice sounds like. I
couldn’t clear it from my mind before bed, and I had to listen to
the Dixie Chicks before I fell asleep so I could be ensured safe,
happy, Tim Keyes-free dreams.
I’ll be the first to say I have eclectic music taste. Look at my
Kazaa playlist, and you will find The Ataris, followed by Rod
Stewart, followed by Bob Dylan, after George Strait. Every single
day, everywhere I go, I find a new song or artist that I like. My
point is, I do not discriminate based on age of performer, genre of
their music, or sometimes even how talented the musician. And yet I
absolutely found nothing even remotely appealing about Tim Keyes’
music. Granted, I have never heard any of his previous work, and
sometimes being understandably narrow-minded, I vow never to
subject myself to the older forms of torture produced by this man.
In the end, I am confident that I can categorize this slop as “weak
song-writing meets a thrift-store keyboard and an old Macintosh
computer, plus a freakishly disturbing, but somehow alright,
voice.”
I’m telling you, do not waste your time on this because you will
be bored, flabbergasted, or, in some cases, disgusted. Even my dad
didn’t like it.
* If I didn’t feel so overcome with remorse whenever I attempt
to give an “F”, this album would have that.)