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The Heat

Jesse Malin

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Album Review

With New York City in his back pocket once again, Jesse Malin continues his serenade to lost loves and forgotten opportunities on his second album, The Heat. He kicks his best buddy, Ryan Adams, out of the production seat to take care of things himself and once more cuts apart his honest heart. Isn't that why most become musicians, to deal with the fear of loss and regret? Their wounded soul becomes their art and a way of dealing with the bad hand they got dealt. It's good therapy for most artists and a cold-water cure for a lot of music fans, but relying on that formula itself doesn't automatically make a great record. The Heat goes through the motions of telling stories and Malin is a charmer with his self-pitying poetics. Songs such as the false sexual gratification of "Arrested," the rompish skip and run of "Mona Lisa," and the haunted political errors of "New World Order" are loaded in affection and raw roots rock. Malin's drag racer-like desire to find some kind of solace with love is even more fierce on "Hotel Columbia," an excellent piano-guitar dalliance that never lets up. But no matter how much The Heat yearns for common ground, Malin's songwriting suffers somewhat. He's skilled and inventive with his work as a musician, but the aches and pains of songs like "Swinging Man" and "God's Lonely People" fall short of what Malin delivered on The Fine Art of Self-Destruction. It's as if he's reaching for something, but uncertain of what he's supposed to be reaching for. That's okay. The Heat is only Malin's second album and shouldn't be categorized as a slump. Sonically, he's progressing into a real cowboy balladeer without dismissing his punk days. The desperation of "Since You're in Love" makes this evident; however, lyrics like "I'm still sad over you" aren't poignant enough. Malin has what it takes to write a really beautiful love song, one full of love's usual blood and guts. Perhaps he's terrified — like most people are — of owning up to the fear of losing it or never having it?

Customer Reviews

A gem of post-punk self-indulgence

This is really a lovely album. Malin has a lot of ties, artistic and personal, to one of music's truest super-heroes: Ryan Adams. Like the latter's tour de force performance on "Rock and Roll", Malin's "The Heat" is a beautifully crafted, charmingly melodious piece of work about, among other things, the self-indulgences and temptations available in New York City, as well as their consequences. Oddly enough enough, for an album that is laregely dark and slow moving, Malin begins this album with one of its jumpiest and most cheerful tunes, ironically a tribute to a friend lost in the 9/11 attacks. "Mona Lisa" jumps out of the gates with is simple, inordinately catchy guitar riff and a cacaphony of voices, both musical and conversational. This gives the song, and the album as a whole, the poignant feel of being a recording of something overheard on the street or the subway or the bar, an eavesdropping of life. The song, with its themes of death, remebrance, and identity powerfully catalogues and slices out of life descriptions of people from every walk of life, soldiers, transvestites, drug addicts, businessmen, and it does this without the usual passing of judgement on non-artistic or revolutionary ways of life. Malin is not afraid to portray life as he sees it, nor is he intent on raising himself above anyone else. Other highlights on the album include "Swingin' Man" a gorgeous ballad about the search for self-importance in musicianship, "Goin' out West", a heartbreaking yarn about the need for escape from the city that never sleeps, and "Hotel Columbia" which is simply a model of melody and texture, with a complexity of form that is incredibly rare in today's music. Buy this album. It's lush, elusive textures, creative and catchy melodies, and entrancingly beautiful, lyrics are a testament to what music really should be today.

two thumbs up

a real artist...

Biography

Born: January 26, 1968 in Queens, NY

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '90s, '00s, '10s

Singer/songwriter Jesse Malin was the face of the glam/hard rock band D Generation for eight years, following the dissolution of Heart Attack, the hardcore punk act he fronted as a teenager in the '80s. They weren't a metal band, but critics quickly dismissed D Generation as Johnny Thunders copycats. Their teased hair and glossy wardrobe were just a part of the act, but substance and song structure were there. As one of New York City's more talented acts of the 1990s, the band released three albums...
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