After Elliott Smith’s death in 2003, a wall on Sunset Boulevard,
where L.A.’s Silver Lake blends into Los Feliz, filled with tributes.
They crept over a colorful design of an auto-repair shop’s façade,
featured on the cover of Smith’s Figure 8 (2000). I drove past
it often, as my wife works a few blocks away and my sons started
pre-school on Sunset in this relentlessly gentrifying, lucratively twee
neighborhood. My sons and I watched that wall crowd with penned or
scrawled flourishes. One of my boys wondered about its boldest message,
left in broad black marker, way up high in a corner: “You fucking coward”.
Similar to Kurt Cobain, a fellow Northwest talent and misfit, Smith’s
sudden end generated sympathy among many and anger among at least a
few. At the time, Smith’s death was locally rumored a suicide, although
some averred that the two stab wounds to Smith’s heart were perhaps the
result of a drug deal gone wrong, rather than a self-inflicted, fatal
wound. Like other entertainers already famous or not yet so, who moved
to Los Angeles and then died mysteriously, Smith’s fate shrouds how we
respond to his career. Listeners may find more gloom in his terse debut
album, Roman Candle, than even Smith intended. Or, this
half-hour may foreshadow his mortality a decade after he recorded nine
songs on a four-track machine with a Radio Shack microphone, as a demo
tape for Portland label Cavity Search.
I’ve always liked Smith’s previous band, Heatmiser. While overlooked,
it boasted a grittier, denser post-hardcore attack, led by fellow
guitarist Neil Gust (later in No. 2), backed by bassist Sam Coomes
(later in Quasi) and drummer Tony Lash (later in Sunset Valley). The
fact that Smith’s fellow Portland-based musicians never sustained the
success he would, as Roman Candle signaled his solo career,
does not diminish Heatmiser’s compact power, with raw melodies and
honest lyrics about sex or sordidness.
These low-life attitudes, if expressed in educated form (Smith and
Gust met at rarified Hampshire College), permeated Smith’s tunes. The
title track opens with soft but insistent strumming. Smith sought to
separate himself from Heatmiser’s roar, and the grunge glory of
Seattle’s Nirvana and Soundgarden. Behind the closely-miked chord
changes and muted fidelity, Smith warbles and wavers, usually troubled.
His talent arrived early, for “Condor Ave.” was written when he was
17. A livelier tune, it narrates depressing subject matter with cheerful
delivery, over a spritely air. This typical, dogged juxtaposition,
over even this short album, can wear an attentive listener down. Smith
parades his gift for lovely guitar, as on “No Name #1”, but his refusal
to ease up on downbeat narratives betrays a contrary bent. In hindsight,
this slant may have hastened his separation from Heatmiser (even if
Gust appears on the cover and Lash helped mix Roman Candle), given his next 10 years of heavy drinking and drugs.
The titling of four songs, and three in a row, as “No Name” nods to
Smith’s willful obscurantism, his insistence on obscurity. Numbers #2
and #3 stay respectable, if less memorable: “Everyone’s gone/ Home to oblivion.”
Yet, pleasant singing and graceful harmony convince a casual listener
(if words retreat to the background) about Smith’s wise choice to
lighten cloudier moods with sunnier melodies.
“Drive All Over Town” drags; the fourth “No Name” about a breakup
finds Smith straining his voice to reach a sensitive register which,
while he carries it off convincingly, may have inspired his imitators to
whine and moan about the lover who left. This self-pitying atmosphere
does dampen Smith’s legacy.
The titles of the final two tracks, “Last Call” and “Kiwi Maddog
20/20” (a fortified wine) allude to the alcohol-fueled concerns that
haunted Smith. The first song despite its put-downs and self-hatred
whirls around a more aggressive guitar, recalling Heatmiser’s ornery, if
textured, songcraft. The second applies reverberation for resonance
(aided by a drummer) which expands acoustic textures. Both songs
anticipate his self-titled second album and his third, Either/Or
(which some of his fans, me included, count as his best). Major label
signing followed. Then, his music became more baroque, more pop and more
Beatlesque. Smith’s characteristic songwriting continued, but studios
and bigger budgets muffled the punch of his direct, honest, even if
uneven first three records, which better show his dynamic range.
Smith figured these songs would lead to an offer of a seven-inch
single on Cavity Search. But all were accepted and released by the
label. Their lo-fi nature (a 2010 remaster tweaked its frequencies, but I
have only heard the CD as released in July 1994) conveys Smith’s pain,
as it applies his musical remedy.
The qualities Smith brings to these sparely played, deftly arranged,
yet simply recorded tracks reveal the themes and styles that led, after
two more (arguably better) albums on Kill Rock Stars, to critical
acclaim and modest mainstream success. Smith was accepted by those who
would too soon express their sadness on that Sunset Boulevard wall.
Anyone who viewed at the 1998 Oscars his nominated ballad “Miss Misery”
may remember his unease, aired all alone before a billion people. Backed
by the house orchestra, he curled up into one of his characteristic
expressions to loneliness. His awkward stance as he sang an abridged
version of the Good Will Hunting song displayed his discomfort.
Fame never fit Smith, although his reputation grew. Predictably, he
lost to Celine Dion’s “My Heart Will Go On,” from Titanic. (Spectrum Culture 10-9-14: "Holy Hell! Roman Candle Turns 20")
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