Well, maybe not. But who wants another Dylan? The fact of the matter is, folk music moves like an iceberg. Still, like an iceberg, when it does move it's a significant event. Well, thanks to Dan Bern, after thirty years and a lot of preciously dull festivals, folk is finally relevant again. Bern is a song-writing machine, so close to the curve of current events that he sometimes comes across more as a singing political columnist than a poet.
At the Bottom Line, he performed a song called
"The Day They Found a Cure for AIDS," and a truly chilling song
about schoolyard shootings a la Kip Kinkel. In
"Most American Men," Bern wonders if he needs to take Viagra, even
though his organs are all in order, just to stay competitive. As a
purveyor of his craft, Bern is fearlessly ambitious, weaving plot
lines and sundry themes into multi-layered song narratives.
Sometimes he uses two or three-character dialogues to propel a
song's story line.
In "Gamblin' With My Love," he sings of writing a play about
Pete Rose and ex-baseball commissioner
Bart Giamatti. The two are discussing Rose's
gambling infractions in a hotel room. Bern jumps back and forth
between portraying himself trying to write the play and narrating
the play itself. He purposely conflates the two so that by the time
he sings the chorus, "Are you Gambling With My Love," the words
have come to apply (albeit humorously) to both situations.
Bern couples his songwriting skills with an ability to lock into an audience and make them hang on his every word. And, as with his approach to songwriting, he doesn't hesitate to think large. When fans at the show requested a song about Bruce Springsteen and "The Day They Found a Cure For AIDS," Bern decided to play "Cure for AIDS," as Bruce Springsteen, using three distinct impersonations to represent the man at different points in his career, and spontaneously revising the lyrics to mimic the Boss's New Jersey dialect.
The song culminated with Bern as a mid-Eighties Bruce bellowing out
the bridge to the song (Bern claimed that was the only time
Springsteen had musical bridges in his songs, necessitating that
particular impersonation). Ultimately, Bern finished the song as
himself -- one part bullshitter, two parts provocateur, singing
bold and intelligent songs that folk hasn't seen since, well, you
know....
JAMIE COWPERTHWAIT(August 27, 1998)
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- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC.