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  • Genre:

    Rock

  • Label:

    Warner Bros.

  • Reviewed:

    July 14, 2004

Lou Reed's new double-disc live release, recorded last year in Los Angeles, offers updates of several old favorites, with some more recent material sandwiched between.

When Lou Reed recently posed with The Strokes for a photo shoot in Filter magazine, the connection was clear: Julian Casablancas has appropriated, if not completely ripped off, Lou's trademark sing/speak delivery and older-than-its-years vocal texture, and the band's guitar sound-- approximately two parts chug, one part ring-- owes no small debt to the ringing chug that Lou honed to syringe-tip perfection in The Velvet Underground. Unquestionably, Lou's legend lives. But what about his music? Given his recent dalliances into updating Edgar Allen Poe (The Raven) and exploring possum life ("Like a Possum", from the lyrically unambitious Ecstasy), the faithful had begun to worry. And so, inevitably, it was time for a live album; enter Animal Serenade.

Last time Lou released record with "Animal" in the title, his career was in similar (if more potentially promising) straits. Fresh off 1973's Berlin, the critical and commercial disappointment we now know to be brilliant in its own self-consciously morbid-as-fuck kind of way, Lou-- still just a year removed from "Walk on the Wild Side" and the Billboard Top 20-- rallied the troops, donned pancake makeup and a studded dog collar, and spat out Rock 'n' Roll Animal, a slick, hard rock reconsideration of his career, and the definitive live document of Lou Reed, Clown Prince of Smack.

Animal Serenade, released a non-coincidental 30 years later, aspires to be the live document of the more refined Lou: he of the leather pants, sunglasses, and the obligatory sleeveless black t-shirt; he who is presumably inclined to ditch his buddies for three-hour tai chi sessions and readings of Faust; he who is on a one-man, Neil-from-Real World: London-like crusade to find the sound so pure as to cause people to shit themselves ("I had an acoustic guitar with the sound of diamonds," enthused Lou in the liner notes for Perfect Night: Live in London).

The song selection, that of an aging artist dependent on his cult, works something like a Rush setlist. Lou and his band offer subtle updates of some but not all of the old favorites ("Men of Good Fortune", "Venus in Furs", "The Day Jack Kennedy Died", "I'll Be Your Mirror", etc.) Newer and/or "overlooked" cuts are hidden inside clusters of more familiar ones, presumably with the implication that, the occasional fuck-up ("Sex with Your Parents Part 2", "Egg Cream", the aforementioned "Possum", etc.) notwithstanding, Lou can still write powerful, smart, deceptively simple songs. Maybe.

Still, the old warhorses are the draw on Animal Serenade, and for the most part, they're given tasteful, appealing (if unspectacular) readings, with cellist Jane Scarpantoni adding texture and Lou's rhythm section laying down the usual workmanlike, just-a-little-too-diligent-for-its-own-good foundation. Lou is in good voice and in a fine mood, even playful in places. ("As in most things in life, it's that little hop in the end," he jokes of the fourth chord in "Sweet Jane". Of course, he doesn't actually play "Sweet Jane".) The two-hour-plus runtime is gratuitous; probably the idea was to present the complete show (a la Alive by Kiss), but the effect is mind-numbing, and most of the successful experiments are lost in well-mannered gray.

Two songs cut through the fog. The Fernando Saunders-penned "Reiven Cherie", the title apparently French for "Ersatz Stevie Wonder", is painfully out of place, overlong, and almost completely unrewarding. Antony, a bold if appropriate choice for a singer on "Candy Says", re-imagines the number as a tragedy, his quivering voice practically dripping with knowing pain, peeling decades of rust off the lyrics, imparting them with feeling, making them new.

Maybe Lou Reed can't be vital anymore. Maybe he's too old, too far removed from the experiences that shaped him. But Animal Serenade proves that his best songs are locked forever in the present-- ageless, timeless, constant, and true; unlike their author, they are immortal.