
I kind of have a thing for beards. Maybe it’s just because regardless of how long I leave the nano-bristles on my face fallow, they resist any respectable growth, but we’ll leave that to one side. My soft spot for soft whiskers is partially what drew me to Devendra Banhart, the Texan-Venezuelan prince of freak-folk, whose wild-child appearance complements the eclectic and unpredictable turns in his songwriting. This is why I was so distraught to learn that (gasp!) – he shaved it off.
One could say Banhart’s (relative) tidying up was precipitated by his recent switch to major label Warner Brothers Records, and further that maybe he is “going mainstream,” compromising the very outré persona that makes Devendra, well, Devendra. A listen to “What Will We Be” quickly squelches that notion, as the album showcases just as many idiosyncrasies and eccentric lyrics as its predecessors.
“Angelika,” an acoustic ballad much like Devendra’s work on “Rejoicing in the Hands” for its first half, takes a left turn, becoming a latin piano groove layered with swirling vocal melodies under Spanish lyrics. Emerging as perhaps the most radio-friendly track is “Baby,” a reflection on the merits of infant life set to electric themes recalling the halcyon aura of soul. “Goin’ Back” grows from Banhart’s Texas roots, a shuffle integrating slide guitar and Western styles into his sui generis aesthetic.
“Chin Chin & Muck Muck,” one of many Devendra songs which lyrically centers around childhood, begins with jazz piano melodies atop gentle, brushed drums, emphasizing the low-key, raspy side of Banhart’s vocals, begetting a tranquil mood augmented by a Wynton Marsalis-style trumpet solo. Not one to travel just one path, Devendra pushes the song into blithe and playful folk territory replete with “la la la’s” and onomatopoeic verses just as impish as the child bouncing in their author’s soul. “Rats” rolls forward with Led Zeppelin’s brio, resembling one of their tracks had it been a love song written from the lyrical perspective of a rodent.
Despite the album’s several highlights, it suffers, especially towards the end, from the repetitiously soporific drones of its lower-key tracks. Loyal fans of Banhart’s work may be more comfortable with the extended, delicately twinkling pianos and mumbled words, but newcomers may find the quieter tracks tedious.
As a whole the album confirms that Banhart’s ingenuity persists. The beard, luscious as it was, appears not to have held the magical genius that whispered to the whimsical space-cadet as he wrote, since the ingenious, goofy, ebullient tracks of “What Will We Be” that came from a clean(er)-shaven Devendra stand just as tall as the vital spirits that guide them.
Tracklist:
- Can’t Help but Smiling
- Angelika
- Baby
- Goin’ Back
- First Song for B
- Last Song for B
- Chin Chin & Muck Muck
- 16th & Valencia Roxy Music
- Rats
- Maria Leonza
- Brindo
- Meet Me at the Lookout
- Walilamzi
- Foolin’
Get it.