The Village Voice
Microscopic Paw
Prints
October
15 - 21, 2003
By: Lalena Fissure
Source
Steve Burns was a rock star long before he recorded an album. Millions of
kids dressed like him, in the green striped shirt from Blue's Clues,
and bought the stuffed Steve doll with a molded-plastic head. Women all over
the world wrote him gushing fan letters—mostly lonely suburban moms looking
for a fantasy replacement dad for their kids, but still.
Steve himself (my former co-worker—I was a designer at Blue's Clues,
making imaginary characters and scenes he pretended to interact with every
day) may have still needed convincing. So he recorded Songs for Dust
Mites, a rock album for himself, about himself, and by . . . the Flaming
Lips! And himself, of course. His favorite band recorded and backed him up.
Talk about a manchild's dream come true!
I'd heard some of his earlier stuff, a couple of recordings he'd made at
home, which were Beck-like in spirit. Meaning the songwriting was
straightforward, and almost secondary to the crafting of the recording. The
same is true of the album; it's just different people producing it—people
with a very identifiable style.
The first song, "Mighty Little Man," comes at you like a comet. After an
explosion of Flaming Lips bass, the chorus blows you high off the ground
with Steve's joyous rock voice and goosebump-inducing melody. The less
imaginative verses pale in comparison.
His mixed metaphors and non sequiturs can be impenetrable. In "What I Do on
Saturday," he insists "I'm just a boring example of everybody else/I threw
out the old one as soon as I found something else." The old what? The
cryptic lyric hardly justifies rhyming a word with itself. Then he sees "a
great big face" out of the blue. Wait. Blue? Is he recalling the
pressures of being a star of children's television? I'm grasping.
Eventually, though, "Stick Around" makes you glad you stuck around. Simple
but not predictable, its phrases tumble out with natural gravity. You've
opened a closet overstuffed with pillows and linens that fall elegantly
around you and splay out on the floor in soft folds. Soon after, a plaintive
trumpet lures you into an instrumental exploration of loving someone so
intensely that you ache with the weight of anticipating an inevitable loss.
The wistful imagery of the title track, invoking a microscopic civilization,
is more typical: You imagine Steve sitting in his apartment, making up songs
for himself and the dust mites.
Steve Burns plays the
Mercury Lounge on October 20.
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