Tom Waits: Small Change - 1976

 

This was the album which saw the voice deepen and get more deliberately (seemingly) croaky and brought out many writers' gargling with concrete/razor blades/broken glass quotes. It certainly gave Waits an unforgettable, once heard, never forgotten character. 

Backed here by a jazz trio of saxophone, bass and drums, along with some string orchestration, Waits' piano and whiskey paeans to night time street low life images and characters are reaching their first peak. Just listen to the marvellous strains of Tom Traubert's Blues (later covered convincingly by Rod Stewart). I love the song and its multifarious images - I never, ever tire of it. Waits apparently wrote it after a night on the whiskey - it certainly did the job. What a song. A candidate for his best ever. "Good night to the street sweepers, the night watchmen, the flame-keepers, and goodnight Matilda too." My goodness, Waits could pen some lyrics.

The old jazzy vibe is still there too on the hip bass sounds and rapped mumblings of the incredibly catchy Step Right Up. Lyrically and stylistically, you know what you're getting by now - Bad Liver And A Broken Heart and The Piano Has Been Drinking are both titles that already could be Waits parodies. 

The rolling drums and rap Pasties And A G-String (another great title) contains the line "make a dead man come" which maybe The Rolling Stones appropriated for Start Me Up a few years later. The One That Got Away is another semi-spoken narration over a subtle bass and saxophone jazzy backing. It's good stuff, but it is a musical formula that has been used several times before by now. 

More spoken lyrics are on the next one too, Small Change (Got Rained On With His Own .38). I guess this was the whole vibe Waits was trying to put over on the album, so I will accept that it works, in the album's context, but he couldn't keep doing album after album in the same style. It wouldn't be for a while yet as the next album ploughed much of this one's furrows too.

I Can't Wait To Get Off Work Work (And See My Baby) is a nice, piano-driven slow ballad that closes the album that finds Tom singing again. It is a disarmingly moving tale in its down home, everyday way. I Wish I Was In New Orleans - which has some of the same atmosphere of Tom Traubert's Blues - and Jitterbug Boy find Tom doing the slurry croakiness to the max, though. Invitation To The Blues is a fine track as well. There is a bit of a patchiness and that afore-mentioned homogeny to this one, though, and I find myself returning, like one of Waits' habitual drinkers, to The Heart Of Saturday Night, which is probably my favourite of all his albums. I just have to love the cover of this one though...

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