TALON'S – songs for babes

(CD, own)

If I told you that this is a concept album all about girls, with each of the dozen songs dedicated to one girl, produced by a guy in his lonely room with his acoustic guitar and a laptop over the weeks before and after new year’s eve 2007 / 2008, you might get the completely wrong impression of a nerd and his unfulfilled dreams and fantasies and a lot of repressed sexuality. If it were so, then it wouldn’t be on own records (but on that major label that releases Weezer – but that is a completely different story, I think). But yes, the basics are true, but Talon is more a dreamer, a romantic and an introspective and I would see his roots rather in Nick Drake’s legacy than anything else. He seems to have his head in the clouds, surround himself with helpful machinery to put his dreams to words and sounds. And after all, twelve girls to fall in love with for real is a lot more than the rest of us ever are ready to put up with. There has to be something special about this guy.

The music is introverted, soft, slow and low, and seems intent to withdraw itself right back into the speakers of your stereo. Talon’s singing style goes along with this. During “Juice” (is there really a girl named “Juice”? Seems as strange to me as that tattoo on the lower back of a girl that I saw a foto of that read “my name is Kelly”??) his singing reminds me a little of Bonnie Prince Billy in its wavering insecurity and soft high pitch. Some of his songs are nothing more than short memories that culminate in a repetition of the girl’s name and then just fade away (like “Angela” or “Mich”) and some are almost or even instrumentals. When he starts with picking and a little band, these are the moments he is the closest to Nick Drake – and who doesn’t fall for the melancholy and genius of Nick Drake? Even a spark of that would make any song great. Talon introduces electronics sparsely and with measure, but at times they are the most discernible part of the songs. Especially when it is field recordings of police sirens or the sound of a car leaving. All of this makes the whole album a good listen on a rainy Sunday noon even when you don’t care about the concept of the songs.

That is except for the fact that some songs just seem to stop midway. That is a little puzzling, but then again it is no big thing when you are not listening closely and really getting into the song. As you could. Then there is something amiss. Talon is not a story teller and all of these songs are not regular love songs or songs about a guy falling in love with a girl and what happens then. “There’s something about you / I remember” (“Mich”) seems to be each and every of the songs started to be written, even if it is not spoken out loud. The tracks tend around little things, small things, memories of something the girl said or did that will make her stick out of the crowd forever for Talon. And now he is sharing that with us. And of course, these are intimate moments of serene insights and baring something of yourself that is usually hidden deeply in our dog eat dog world. So, if you listen to this, be as sensible and open as Talon and give him some respect. And give your loved one a hug and a kiss.

www.ownrecords.com

11/2009