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Ezra Furman sings to the barricades on the righteous, furious Twelve Nudes

Music Reviews music review
Ezra Furman sings to the barricades on the righteous, furious Twelve Nudes
Photo: Jessica Lehrman

Transphobia is not punk. No form of bigotry is, no matter how often dweebs in polo shirts declare their odiously hateful politics to be “the new punk rock.” Ezra Furman, meanwhile, is punk, both spiritually and sonically, on Twelve Nudes, the rock ’n’ roll flame-keeper’s eighth album under his own name. Recorded in a flurry of inspiration last fall—“We made it in Oakland, quickly. We drank and smoked. Then we made the loud parts louder… the songs are naked with nothing to hide,” Furman explains in the album press release—the record is as raw as a scraped knee and more furious than a woman scorned, a brick through the window of our reactionary era that draws inspiration from the equally pissed-off first wave of punk rock. And it makes sense: The late 1970s were a period of unrest, when an abandoned generation screamed their frustrations amid the crumbling infrastructure of similarly neglected cities. Sound familiar?

Twelve Nudes kicks the door in and pogos through with “Calm Down (I Should Not Be Alone),” 2 minutes and 20 seconds of manic aggression that set the tone for the gloriously messy, cathartic 26 minutes that follow. But while the record serves as a sample platter of punk and punk-adjacent musical styles—robotic new wave on “Rated R Crusaders,” hardcore thrash on “Blown,” rolling surf-rock drums on “Thermometer,” the melodramatic ’60s ballads so beloved by Joey Ramone on “I Wanna Be Your Girlfriend”—the classic rock flavor of Furman’s last album, Transangelic Exodus, also carries over. That’s especially true of “In America,” a Born In The U.S.A. B-side from another, queerer dimension that snarks, “clean me out like an enema, Miss America.” But the three degrees of Bruce Springsteen are also evident on “Evening Prayer a.k.a. Justice,” a fist-pumping call to arms whose lyrical poetry and battered guitars would make Patti Smith, with whom Springsteen wrote “Because The Night,” proud.

Queer politics and class politics dominate the lyrics on Twelve Nudes, inextricably mixed in with Furman’s own personal-is-political gender journey. (“I was considering ditching Ezra and going by Esme,” he confesses on “I Wanna Be Your Girlfriend.”) All of these aspects of identity are painfully fraught in a world where fascism is on the rise, and the gap between rich and poor grows wider by the second. And Furman’s voice is appropriately shredded over clanging guitars, like he stayed up all night chain smoking before yelling his lungs out at a protest march. Some of the album’s lyrics are electrifyingly defiant, like the “fuck ’em, let’s dance” sentiment of album closer “What Can You Do But Rock ’N’ Roll.” Some of them are even darkly funny: “My Teeth Hurt,” about learning to love a toothache because you don’t have the money to fix it, should be highly relatable for artists, freelancers, retail workers, and everyone else for whom dental insurance seems as unattainable and outlandish as a gold-plated toilet.

At the same time, that song also contains the devastating truth, “when pleasure lets you down, you learn to lean into the pain.” Furman’s got a full quiver of such lyrical arrows to the heart, as when he sings, “I tried to ask what it means to be a man / they threw me in the back of a truck and tied my hands,” on “Transition From Nowhere To Nowhere,” a chilling evocation of the resurgent threat of homophobic hate crimes. (See also the anthemic “Trauma,” where Furman sings, “I know how hard you’ve been working / we all know somebody who’s been killed.”) This “positivity of negativity,” as Furman’s label Bella Union characterizes it, combines with the driving tempos and rough guitars to create a desperately vulnerable, righteously defiant artistic whole. All this ragged immediacy can be unfocused and rambling at times, even though the album clocks in at under half an hour. But when you’re sweating out all your pain and grief in the pit, an occasional elbow to the head is to be expected.

18 Comments

    • fuckbootlickers-av says:

      Insert identity politics every 5 seconds, receive high praise from the Katie Rifes of the entertainment blog world.

      • underemploid-av says:

        Blah, blah, blah blah blah.

      • tekkactus-av says:

        stop

      • vadasz-av says:

        You mean like The Clash?Or the Damned? Or the Jam, or the Sex Pistols, or the Dead Kennedies, or Patti Smith, or Bad Brains, or Stiff Little Fingers, or Bad Religion, or Black Flag, or the Circle Jerks?Etc., etc., etc.?Fuckin simpleton.

        • fuckbootlickers-av says:

          Artists who directed their anger at global politics and injustices, unlike these “look at me” identity politics about self righteous navel gazing as an act of resistance. Earth has actual issues and is in crises in ways these Tumblr-punks are either ignore or don’t give a shit about altogether because their bubble doesn’t allow for nuance.But hey, let’s Stan them solely on the basis of where they land on a spectrum or else armchair sociologists will scream.

          • philosopherdirtbike-av says:

            I agree, it’s much cooler to be an Internet commenter directing your anger towards an artist for not being mad in the exact way you want them to be.Also, this single from the album is exactly what you’re complaining it’s not, so what are you even on about? You just saw a non-gender-conforming person in the picture and thought “I’m gonna fuck this review up”?

          • vadasz-av says:

            punk has always mixed the personal with the political, it’s always played around with gender roles, it’s always sung songs about boredom as much as  “global politics” – and it’s always annoyed squares.

          • fuckbootlickers-av says:

            Keep buying that narrative.

          • vadasz-av says:

            Damn, sick burn.Do you poop gold briquettes or perfectly formed s’mores?(but seriously, you seem to know jack shit about punk, so I’d be curious (well not that curious) to know how your trolling accords with your concern for all the “actual concerns” of the earth right now and all the hard work you’re putting in to addressing them.)

          • popculturesurvivor-av says:

            Since when did anything about punk not scream “LOOK AT ME?”

      • popculturesurvivor-av says:

        That’s “Katie Rives of the world.”

  • wondercles-av says:

    So if I understand correctly, punk has always been garbage?

  • lezzymclezface-av says:

    Men wearing lipstick and remaining men is punk. Asking for nudes from women and singing about it like a perv is not punk. 

  • dirk-steele-av says:

    His work on The Magicians is pretty good, too.

  • rahman8675-av says:

    nice post Katie Rife .nice story link: plz view http://bit.ly/2MHxFPW

  • biladh44-av says:

    Thanks

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