Album: Damon Albarn – The Nearer The Source, More Pure The Stream Flows – The Arts Desk

Posted: November 11, 2021 at 5:33 pm

The deliberate austerity of its predecessor, Everyday Robots (2014), was shown when accompanying, full-band gigs revealed the bright pop song finery beneath the albums bleak camouflage. Where others go solo to satisfy band-cramped egos, solo Damon is a place of anticlimax and indirection, where his gift for melody is befogged and hazy.

The Nearer The Source, More Pure The Stream Flows began as an orchestral project inspired by Albarns sometime Reykjavik home, played by Icelandic musicians. The cheap, irritant pulse of a Casiotone drum-machine betrays its homemade, lockdown finish. The title is a line by John Clare, the working-class Romantic poet whose early enraptured accord with rural rhythms became so fractured he was committed to an asylum in Albarns native Essex; a Syd Barrett-style walk back to his Northamptonshire home has added to his sanctity as an artist of the brokenly beautiful, lonely and lost. The title track is accordingly infused with mourning and wistful remembrances. Couched in Clares antique language, its sluggish and near-numb with loss, inspired by the death of Albarns friend and bandmate, the great drummer Tony Allen.

The following track, The Cormorant, updates Seventies Bowies influence on Nineties Blur to the shivery end-games of The Next Day and Blackstar. Inspired by a bird hed see daily on the Devon coast near his home studio, Albarns voice takes on Bowies theatrical quaver and latter-day, wounded wooziness as he recounts days when we were happy here, on the beach/We played with our children... An uncharted cruise ship floats by the songs island battered Albion, here as desolate as Rockall. By the end of Royal Morning Blues, its uptempo funk brass has evaporated like morning mist, leaving him aching for company at the end of the world. Daft Wader comes closest to the bittersweet anthems Blur conjured in such terrain, observing a Lancelot in his beaten up old car; Particles, too, with its relatively fulsome romantic plea: I have cried for you, darling/Are you coming back to me?

The Tower of Motevideo speaks directly to lockdowns state of exile, already fading now, its lessons unlearned. Once there were cinemas, and we had parties, Albarn murmurs, as music and footsteps become phantoms, and a sax soars in an empty Argentine ballroom.

This is an insular and hypnotic, intimate yet distant album, lapped by literal, musique concrete waves. The frayed strands of melodic beauty Albarn allows into his solo retreat are themselves ghostly, reaching out to touch the listener from the hermetic place where the former Britpop king conducts his private experiments, like Dr. Dee, or Robinson Crusoe.

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Album: Damon Albarn - The Nearer The Source, More Pure The Stream Flows - The Arts Desk

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