Open – Duke Egbert

Reviewed by Duke Egbert
Published on Jul 3, 2001

The new Cowboy Junkies CD is called
Open. Someone should have left it closed.

Don’t get me wrong, I like the Cowboy Junkies. I really do.
The Trinity Session and
Miles From Our Home are some of my favorite mood music;
there are just certain times when I want something slow, dark, and
a little odd, and the Junkies are perfect for that. But in every
band’s life, a time comes when they sacrifice listenability for
alleged art, and I’m afraid that
Open is a prime example for that. Too much atmosphere, too
little clarity, and above all too much feedback.

Some things haven’t changed. Lead vocalist Margo Timmins’ voice
is still rich and expressive, ambient and atmospheric. Michael
Timmins still plays a mean guitar, though on
Open it’s overly distorted, processed, and effects-laden.
The songs are still musically complex and challenging.

But oh, the production. The bad, bad, bad production. Sometimes
Margo’s voice is so far drowning in background crap and guitar
effects you want to throw her a life preserver. The spare, clean
sound of the band’s past recordings is so far cast away you want to
give it a volleyball to talk to. Despite being the Daily Vault’s
resident Production Junkie, it’s not very often that it’s the worst
thing on a CD.
Open gets that dubious honor. While I’m positive the various
distortions were chosen for some artistic reason, what their
cumulative effect is is not art, but mud – thick, nasty, gluey mud
that keeps this CD from ever flying.

The songs on
Open aren’t bad; some of them are downright good, in fact.
“Thousand Year Prayer” is plain and simply arranged, so it works
and works well. “Bread And Wine” has some neat turns of phrase in
it (“And there’s a line in my head from an old gospel song / But no
matter how I try, the words come out wrong”).

Fundamentally, however,
Open really has very little to recommend it save for
hardcore Cowboy Junkies fans. While there may have been a reason
for the production techniques Michael Timmins used, I would say
next time to remember to keep it simpler than this. As it stands,
Open isn’t very open to a clear, listenable sound at
all.

Rating: D+

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