Aug
12
Buy the new Warren Zanes album. Now.
I don’t know why some songs spark an intense, emotion connection while others leave us cold.
For me, I can’t listen to Kathy McCarthy’s version of “Living Life,” Zevon’s “Desperados Under the Eaves” or the Kinks’ “Some Mother’s Son” without actually choking up. How to explain? I can’t. It’s not just the subject matter. I don’t feel teary when “Brick” or “Wish You Were Here” play. It’s the chemical, cosmic beauty of how our brains respond emotionally to art.
Which brings me to the new Warren Zanes record, “I Want to Move Out in the Daylight.” I remember the first time I heard it. April 25, 2010. At the time, it had no name. Warren handed me a burnable CD the night of our Boston screening of DO IT AGAIN. I remember an evasiveness when I asked him of his plans for the songs. He told me that he wasn’t sure when it would come out or if it was going to come out in this form.
And I remember that next day, after the insanity of the sold-out Boston screening and the knowledge that our young son would be born three days later, having “Daylight” on as I drove around doing errands. I listened straight through until I got to “That’s All There Is,” and had to listen to that particular song again.
“That’s All There Is,” to me, summed up why this record had to come out. Like much of “Daylight,” I assumed it was about Warren’s dissolving marriage. The breakup had hit Warren hard and I assume he was unsure of how to deal with the art that came out of it. Because while Warren is a musician and deep thinker, he’s also – and pardon me for sounding like a cliché, but it’s true – a father first. He’s also a student of family dynamics. (You saw DO IT AGAIN, right?) He’s spent a lifetime contemplating his own upbringing – the Zanes clan has never been mistaken for the Cleavers – and I know his desire was never to drop an emotional music bomb on his boys.
That’s what’s so perfect about “That’s All There Is” and so many of the so-called breakup songs on this record. There is the “Here, My Dear” school of breakup records and then there’s “Daylight.” What Warren does is chronicle a universal experience (breakup, midlife crisis) without naming names. It never feels mean or petty. I assume with a little distance, Warren realized that these songs were too good to keep to himself and they also were not damaging to his kids. That’s why you can now buy a copy of “Daylight.”
What does the album sound like? Those of you who saw DO IT AGAIN know that we featured several songs from Warren’s previous solo albums in the film. He’s one of those rare people (along with Yo La Tengo’s Ira Kaplan) who thrives as both an historian/critic and a musician. He has a great pop sensibility and understands the importance of a juicy hook. That’s evident on songs like “Would it Be Wrong to Love You” and “Nothing to Do Now.” In other places, Warren has stripped down his sound, emphasizing his voice and acoustic-instruments to make the record feel more intimate than his previous albums.
So go buy “Daylight.” Warren barely plays out. He’s a grown man with children and he’s never going to be a rock star. (Despite getting blurbs from Tom Petty and Cameron Crowe on this disc.) But he deserves to be heard. And he deserves our support as a member of the DO IT AGAIN family.












