Wednesday, November 10, 2010

'Lonely Avenue,' Ben Folds and Nick Hornsby

Narrative stories just don't translate into songs.

Leah Sottile
Ben Folds and Nick Hornsby
Ben Folds and Nick Hornsby
Ben Folds and Nick Hornsby
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Lonely Avenue
Ben Folds & Nick Hornsby

I really couldn’t feel more mixed about an album, a singer and a writer. Lonely Avenue is rooted in a cool concept: singer/piano man Ben Folds takes the words of Nick Hornby (High Fidelity, About a Boy) and makes them into songs. Easy enough, right? Well, no. Not at all.

There are times when the difficulty of transforming a narrative — a clump of words with no rhyme or chorus — shows here. The power and humor of Hornby’s writing, sadly, gets lost under Folds’ supervision.

For the most part, the prose-to-song process only seems to produce long, meandering, tough-to-follow songs whose weaknesses are shellacked in glittering keyboards and thick bass lines. Essentially: lots of polished turds here.

But in the confusing thicket, a few songs stick out — the simple, quiet and beautiful “Practical Amanda” especially. And, of course, “Levi Johnston’s Blues,” a hilarious ditty about the dork who knocked up Sarah Palin’s daughter.

DOWNLOAD: “Levi Johnston’s Blues”

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