The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 
CD Reviews  |  Classical  |  Live Reviews  |  Music Features

Poetic license

Carla Bruni’s No Promises
By CHARLES TAYLOR  |  February 20, 2007

070223_bruni_main
HUSH HUSH: No Promises tries to return poetry to the realm of the colloquial.
For generations, moony adolescents have stoked their feelings of being sensitive and misunderstood by moping around reading poetry. In the last 50 or so years, some have picked up acoustic guitars and burdened an uneager world with their own poetry. (Worse still, some of them have gotten recording contracts.) On No Promises (Naïve import), Italian model turned singer Carla Bruni leaves the lyrics to the real poets, writing musical backing for poems by Auden, Yeats, Emily Dickinson, Walter de la Mare, Christina Rossetti, and Dorothy Parker. If ever an album ran the risk of pretension, this is it. But No Promises turns out to be a casual, offhand charmer, and Bruni seems like a performer of terrific taste, pitch, and restraint.

Not for her to wander lonely as a cloud through selections designed to show off a swoony poetic sensibility. She essays Dorothy Parker’s “Ballade at Thirty-Five” in a way that does full justice to the parody of self-pity that Parker intended by that unnecessary “e,” giving “Decked in garments of sable hue/Daubed in ashes of myriad Lents/Wearing shower bouquets of rue/Walk I ever in penitence” their irony. The humor of these lines is in their self-consciousness. Parker is taking the piss out of “poetic” language, and Bruni sets up this reverie of lamented loves so that the final line, “I loved them until they loved me” comes as a deflating zinger.

Bruni’s vocals tend toward the hushed, though there’s nothing coy or affected about her delivery. Throughout No Promises (the title comes from Christina Rossetti’s “Promises like Pie-Crust”) her breathy, thick English conveys the best kind of reserve. She holds herself back from the lyrics, not because she disdains emotion but because she trusts the poems to speak for themselves. She doesn’t push the longing in Emily Dickinson’s “If you were coming in the fall” or sentimentalize the compassion and frank self-appraisal of Yeats’s “Before the World Was Made.” The respect with which she approaches these poems is the opposite of paralyzing reverence — she’s trying to return poetry to the realm of the colloquial. Her tossed-off phrasing, especially the endearing way her voice tends to fade when reaching for a higher note, resists declamation. And the music she’s written, especially as played by the album’s unsung hero, guitarist Louis Bertignac, resists stateliness. Yeats’s “Those Dancing Days Are Gone” is a folkish shuffle. Dickinson’s “I felt my life with both my hands” is typical in having a melody so simple, the musicians might have stumbled on it while sitting around talking and strumming.

No Promises is eccentric enough to become a beloved oddball treasure. It’s also one of those mellow records with a cool cachet that runs the risk of being played incessantly in cafés and boutiques — something that nearly happened to Bruni’s first album. If it interests you, get it now. Its modest pleasures shouldn’t be ruined by overexposure.

Related: The Paris Review Interview, Vol. 1 introduction by Philip Gourevitch, Visiting hours, Tripping, More more >
  Topics: Music Features , Entertainment, Music, Music Reviews,  More more >
  • Share:
  • Share this entry with Facebook
  • Share this entry with Digg
  • Share this entry with Delicious
  • RSS feed
  • Email this article to a friend
  • Print this article
HTML Prohibited
Add Comment

[ 03/19 ]   Marty Rowen, Benny Benson & Bruce Bartlett  @ Chianti Cafe
[ 03/19 ]   Jenee Halstead + Tony Savarino + Brendan Hogan + Dan Blakeslee  @ Center for Arts at the Armory
[ 03/19 ]   Hye Min Yun  @ Williams Hall at New England Conservatory
[ 03/19 ]   Sam Ou  @ New England Conservatory
[ 03/19 ]   John McDonald  @ Tufts University Granoff Music Center
PHX @ SXSW 2010
SXSW-2010
ARTICLES BY CHARLES TAYLOR
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   GOOD COMPANY  |  March 02, 2010
    One of the attractions of our getting hooked on a series of novels with a recurring protagonist is the reassurance that once every year or so we'll have a friend to catch up with. What we don't like to think about is how it'll feel when that friend is in bad shape.
  •   PLEASURE PRINCIPLES  |  December 02, 2009
    Willard Spiegelman seems like a nice guy. He has had the good luck to live a happy life without major disaster or suffering. But as a long-time professor of English at Southern Methodist University and editor of the Southwest Review , he has ended up living his life among just those people — writers and academics.
  •   HEART AND CLAW  |  August 25, 2009
    Joe Lansdale's Hap and Leonard act out
  •   WYNDHAM'S WAR  |  July 21, 2009
    Francis Wyndham's first book of short stories, Out of the War , was published in 1974, when the author was 50 and in the midst of a distinguished career of reviewing and editing.
  •   DEATH WATCH  |  May 19, 2009
    Michael Connelly's newspaper elegy

 See all articles by: CHARLES TAYLOR

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed 



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2010 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group