Alex Chilton: A Man Called Destruction
Alex Chilton
A Man Called Destruction
(Omnivore Records)
Hereâs the thing about cult artists: if youâre already in the cult, itâs hard to explain why youâre a fan. All you have to do is listen to the object of your musical admiration and itâs obvious why theyâre so great. But you either get it or you donât. Thatâs why some people swear by everything Tom Waits has ever done while others canât get past the voice and the weirdness. To me, Alex Chiltonâs genius is blatantly apparent on almost everything heâs ever done. His three albums with Big Star are all pop/rock masterpieces. If that was all he ever did it would have been enough. His solo career is icing on the cake.
If youâve already drank the Chilton Kool-Aid and havenât heard A Man Called Destruction yet then do yourself a favor and pick it up. Omnivore Records has made it easy for you by kindly reissuing it. This is music for fans of Big Starâs Third/Sister Lovers. On the surface it’s good, plain olâ R&B influenced rock ânâ roll, featuring some great guitar work by Chilton and a killer horn section, but underneath thereâs something not easily explainable. âSick and Tiredâ starts off the album with a saxophone groove that canât help but make you smile and/or dance. Itâs not long before the strangeness shows up though. While âDevil Girlâ is a cool, New Orleans-style, lounge R&B song thereâs something tweaked about it. Thereâs a break in the middle where Chilton declares, âSatan rules, â and whether or not you laugh at it or with it determines if youâre a fan or not.
If you think his cover of âWhatâs Your Sign Girlâ is a put on then this album just isnât for you. Chilton-ites will hear the sincerity in it. They, like the man himself, will realize that âIl Ribelleâ and âNew Girl in Schoolâ are just good rock songs, which is why they deserve to be covered here. The rest of the originals that close out the album, as well as the bonus tracks, make a beautiful, complete package thatâs off-beat to be sure, but at itâs core is just great music. To only see silliness is to completely miss the point. Alex Chilton was one of our most unique musicians and he believed very genuinely in what he was doing. This is why he was never big in his time yet people continue to discover him. He was a true original that the rest of the world is trying to catch up to. These reissues are a pretty good start.
