Real Gone cover

Real Gone

Released

After several theatrical productions and movie roles, Tom Waits released a new collection of songs that existed only for themselves in 2004, and it was quite a sonic departure. The horns and piano were mostly gone, replaced with electric guitar, bass, and of all things, turntables (played by his son Casey). This is the first Waits album to contain a reference to anything remotely modern, too — the song “Metropolitan Glide” has a line about a cellular phone. Lyrically, it’s a dark and somewhat angry album, and he’s in roaring, shrieking vocal form; on that same track, he emits a high-pitched screech reminiscent of Einstürzende Neubauten’s Blixa Bargeld, and he even beatboxes on a few tracks. There are a few softly crooned ballads, too, of course (“Dead And Lovely,” “How’s It Gonna End,” “Trampled Rose”), some of which hark back to the clattering rural sound of Mule Variations. But tracks like the aptly titled “Clang Boom Steam” and “Make It Rain” are so noisy they’re almost industrial.

Phil Freeman

Suggestions
Garden cover

Garden

Uncivilized
Solstice cover

Solstice

Jan Garbarek, Eberhard Weber, Jon Christensen, Ralph Towner
Rides Again cover

Rides Again

James Gang
La Nuit cover

La Nuit

Proton Burst
The Veil cover

The Veil

Jim Black, Nels Cline, BB&C, Tim Berne
United cover

United

Woody Shaw
Have One on Me cover

Have One on Me

Joanna Newsom
Overcome cover

Overcome

Dave Douglas
Momentum Space cover

Momentum Space

Elvin Jones, Cecil Taylor, Dewey Redman
Gub cover

Gub

Pigface