Lou Reed
Ecstasy (Reprise)

Back in 1996, Lou the lovebird was making hooky wooky with a new flame and pledging that he'd hang on to his emotions. But scarcely four years later, he's got the blue mask on again, and slashing, probing, cajoling and roaring his way through the psychic detritus of a romance turned rote, he succeeds in making it sound like 1982 all over again. With the longest-lived and fiercest band of his solo career egging him on, Reed careens from paranoid to pastoral, infidelity to introspection, and proves once and for all that his great subject isn't the mean streets of urban civilization but the dark alleys of the human heart. If he has his self-indulgent moments - and no, the 18-minute noise-blues opus "Like a Possum" isn't one of them - well, he's earned them. He's a legend pushing 60 who refuses to go quietly, a practitioner of a pop culture form who still believes you can fashion challenging art out of the three chords. So when he bellows, "I'm the only one left standing/Shooting and coming 'til it hurts," that's not the sad braggadocio of a middle-aged burn out. It's the sound of rock and roll's great spiritual malcontent raging against the dying of the light, and pissing on the plot of musical ground that almost no one working the form today has the balls to contest.

Rating: 9

- Rob Brookman


 

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