Beat Avenue is 60-year-old
Eric Andersen's most ambitious album, a 90-minute tour de force that encapsulates his musical and lyrical concerns over a lifetime. The music is often-dense
rock dominated by a rhythm section led by guitarist
Eric Bazilian of
the Hooters. Equally dense is
Andersen's highly poetic versifying, which he sings in his gruff baritone.
Andersen is world-weary in these songs, roaming the globe haunted by the past and fearful of the future. He confesses to a reckless youth, but acknowledges that he can no longer afford such license. "What once was
Charles Bukowski," he sings in
"Before Everything Changed," referring to the free-living beat poet, "is now
Emily Dickinson." The
ballads and love songs
"Song of You and Me," "Shape of a Broken Heart," "Under the Shadows," and
"Still Looking for You" are rendered tenderly, but they are also full of regret and loss, past-tense reflections that recount memories of love long gone. The first disc of
Beat Avenue is complete and formidable unto itself, but there is a second CD consisting of two lengthy songs. The title track, running more than 26 minutes, is a beat poem with jazzy accompaniment by
Robert Aaron in which
Andersen recalls a poetry reading he attended as a 20-year-old on the day President
Kennedy was assassinated. Beat writers such as
Allen Ginsberg and
Jack Kerouac come up in his reminiscence, along with friends and fellow musicians, as he conjures up the sound and feel of the early '60s in San Francisco and pinpoints a moment when history changed, revealing how it felt for one young observer. This isn't
folk music of the type with which
Andersen is generally associated, and it can be demanding of the listener, but it is also a compelling transformation of memory into art song. ~ William Ruhlmann