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[Sound Salvation]
B Y + S A R A H + V O W E L L


Wall-to-wallowing carpet
The songs on British folk singer Beth Orton's "Trailer Park" will brighten any Winnebago.

putting on a record is an editorial decision, a way of shaping your story, changing a room, introducing a character into the plot of your day. Unlike some rock 'n' roll fans I've known (and lived with), I'm not uneasy with silence. The comfort of quiet is its own self-reliant reward. Thus every walk over to the stereo is sparked by desire -- to make the here and now better (or worse, or just plain different). The small, seemingly insignificant act of placing a disc in a machine gives birth each time to a whole new sound. And if you're not changed by the sound, if it doesn't ease your mind or crack you up or make you fume or scare you into snapping out of self-pity or something, then why waste the electricity?

Often as not, I like to let songs boss me around. Feeling clumsy? James Brown still yells at you to shut up and dance. Dumb? Aretha makes you "Think." Depressed? Merle Haggard says quit your whining because you think you got problems? He's in jail, broke, drunk, has a blind father, deaf mother and comes from Oklahoma. And when I'm not playing records because I need my mommy, then it's because I need a friend, need the Young Fresh Fellows' charming admission that "When I'm down, I think of you my friend Ringo" or the Lemonheads' head-patting "It's a Shame About Ray."

Apparently Lemonhead Evan Dando himself is on the buddy watch too. Rumor has it that he spotted 26-year-old English singer-songwriter-scenester Beth Orton in a London pub and snapped her up as a tour mate. And that was before her comely new album, "Trailer Park" (Dedicated), came into being. What Dando might have heard in her voice in that bar, and what I hear in her record, is a skilled experiment of superimposing airy, folky, Anglo melodies onto (you'd think) clashing hip-hopped beats.

I like "Trailer Park" but I don't know what to do with it. The first time I played it, I felt the shock of recognition. Despite its formal freshness, it didn't change the sound in the room or the sound in my head, it was the room, is my head. And frankly, I've had it up to here with me and my apartment. There's a glittery lake out the window and a lot of clutter inside. Orton's songs strike that balance between nature and culture, between her pure, sea-of-green voice backed by earthy strings and guitar and the urban club cool of dance-rhythm synths.

If Orton is out on a dance floor, she's dancing alone ... slow. On "Tangent," a disquieting space-beat introduction gives way to her casual humming. Hearing this murmur -- and it lasts less than 10 seconds before she starts singing actual words about how she's "lost in a tangent" -- feels like eavesdropping, as if the loner swaying with her eyes closed doesn't know everyone out on the floor can hear her moans. It's a beautiful reverie, but if you spend your whole life fending off daydreams, then why play someone else's? Lost in a tangent? I live in one.

Orton's loveliest song, the low-key ballad "How Far," probably does me the least bit of good of all. Her voice has a sweet, no-nonsense twinge of apathy when she talks about how it doesn't matter whether she stays or goes, how "it doesn't make a bit of difference anymore, anyway." I can't use these words or the nonchalant sound that backs them, which is a shame considering that it's such a nice tune. I mean, I need a kick in the pants here. I want some inspiration, some singer or drummer or accordion player or whatever telling me stuff matters, to quit staring off into space and act now! because it might be too late. Orton points out, "It's easy to forget how far we've come" and that might be true for the both of us. Well, I don't know about her, but I could profit by some maniac like Iggy Pop egging me on with standards to "Search and Destroy."

The only part of "How Far" I can salvage is the circles she draws around the sentiment "I had to be here." It's the only time on the entire pretty record when she takes a stand, when she quits daydreaming and doesn't-mattering long enough to risk speaking in exclamation points.

But that's just me. I reckon Orton's cloudy lyricism might spruce up your room if it's too urban or too landlocked or too loud, or rearrange your head if it's too frenetic or too focused or too loud. Her songs bear a gorgeous, if precarious, peace that could inspire daydreams if that's what you're lacking. Because the most striking recordings to you will always redecorate whatever place you inhabit.
June 27, 1997

[sound clip]
[ Hear "She Cries Your Name" by Beth Orton ]

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