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The
Invisible Man
May 22, 2001
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The
Invisible Man is a wildly adventurous musical departure
for Mark Eitzel, and, we think, the finest album of his career.
After seven albums fronting American Music Club (1985-1994),
garnering endless Album of the Year and Songwriter
of the Year accolades from magazines such as Rolling
Stone and Spin, Eitzel went on to a critically successful
solo career. On the three solo albums, he was joined by various
collaborators such as Bruce Kaphan and Danny Pearson of AMC,
James McNew from Yo La Tengo, Steve Shelley from Sonic Youth,
Mike McCready from Pearl Jam, and Peter Buck from REM. The
big story on The Invisible Man, however, is that
Mark has chosen to go it alone; doing most of the producing,
recording and arranging, and playing most of the instruments
himself, yet creating a sound that takes over the room like
nothing else this year.
A listen to just the first song (The Boy With The Hammer
In The Paper Bag) might lead one to think that Eitzel
has made an electronic album with seething lyrics, while the
last song (the single Proclaim Your Joy) is a
hilarious and uplifting rock song, that would give a completely
different impression if heard by itself. In between, Eitzel
covers a wide landscape. The Invisible Man is
an extraordinarily dramatic and emotional album, one that
has both dark moments and uncharacteristically optimistic
ones. Humour and gravity, proclamations of despair and joy
with a few curveballs. What is particularly notable
throughout is that there are more choruses and genuinely catchy
hooks per square inch than any other Eitzel album.
For the uninitiated, Mark Eitzel is a songwriter and musician
admired by a diverse array of artists, from Joni Mitchell
to Tricky, Polly Harvey to Elton John, Elvis Costello to Stephin
Merritt, Sheryl Crow to Ryan Adams, to name just a few. An
Eitzel tribute album, Come On Beautiful, was released in October
2000, with tracks by Calexico, Lambchop and others. Live renditions
of Eitzel songs have also been performed by bands including
The Divine Comedy, Everything But The Girl and The Indigo
Girls.
The year 2000 also saw the release of Wish The World Away,
a critical biography of Eitzel and American Music Club by
Sean Body (SAF Publishing, UK), and Warner Brothers reissued
the first two American Music Club albums (Engine and Restless
Stranger), with bonus tracks.

From
Mark: I worked on The Invisible Man for over two
years, writing over 40 songs, and recording with a bunch of
different people, but mostly by myself. I wrote all of the
songs on an acoustic guitar, but finished most with a sampler
and Pro-tools on a Mac G-4 computer (affectionately nicknamed
The Dumb Ass) in the front room of my house in
San Francisco. Most of the time I had on headphones and the
neighbors never complained. I have since put together a really
terrific 4-piece band to play this music live. We rehearse
in the living room, and the neighbors only complain occasionally.
The Invisible Man is dedicated to all the friends
Ive lost while making this record.
1) The Boy With The Hammer In A Paper Bag
It takes place in an illegal underground club in San Francisco,
populated by artists, hipsters, strippers, pornographers,
and other well-dressed individuals. The subject of this song
had a particularly good look.
2) Can You See Halloween in San Francisco,
riding around on my bicycle from street party to street party,
and then talking all night to a friend in a costume. If the
arrangement brings to mind the Carpenters in a twisted sort
of way, Ill take that as a compliment.
3) Christian Science Reading Room New York
City, Winter 1999. Its a true story. All of my songs are
true stories, actually.
4) Sleep Its a song about writing a songabout
wishing I was in AC/DC circa early 70s. Im hoping this song
will land me a lucrative job as a jingle writer for Tylenol
PM.
5) To The Sea About a singer/songwriter
and the story I heard of his untimely death, and how most
people reject his kind of purity
6) Shine This comes from the same Halloween
and how I never seem to be able to dress up in costume, because
I feel like an idiotI feel fake enough in my own skin.
7) Steve I Always Knew A true story about
somebody in 1985 who told me that I was the worst poet he
ever met. I was immediately taken with him. And its about
good drugs and bad sex.
8) Bitterness About an aging over-the-hill
pop welterweight who bears no resemblance to myself. Inspired
by a PBS television show about James Baldwin. 9) Anything
Perhaps these comments arent such a great idea, after
all Maybe you should project your own imagination onto
this song, and Ill just shut up.
10) Without You An over-the-top exploration
of pretension and loss, featuring a visceral and rather embarrassing
vocal performance in tribute to the disappearance of the grey
whale.
11) The Global Sweep Of Human History Whilst
not being great art, it is about the things that inspire great
art, which are murder and betrayal.
12) Seeing Eye Dog Written as a memo to
a friend who I wish had lived long enough for it to be true.
13) Proclaim Your Joy Written in 5 minutes,
featuring 3 chords played over and over again.
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