Rating:
As Is Now is Weller's eighth studio solo album, and it does very little that
you could call unexpected, but does it all very well nonetheless. Following
the inconsequential covers album Studio 150, it's a welcome return to form,
harking back to the straight-ahead rock'n'roll of 1997's Heavy Soul with
shades of the mellow craft that dominated 2002's Illumination. Weller's
husky voice still handles the charging rockers nicely, but it's the more
subtle ballads like the searching, Mellotron-soaked "Pan" where he really
shines and gets to use his range to its fullest effect.
"I Wanna Make It Alright" is one of several songs that hint at Weller's love
of jazz, loping along with a swinging gait as pianos whiz about in the
background and he sings in a falsetto. "Roll Along Summer" goes
even further in that direction, centering on a fluttering alto sax solo and
loose-limbed drumming that smoothly underpins Weller's swooping vocals. The
alto sax makes a grittier appearance on the the seven-minute
groover "Bring Back the Funk", a track that suffers from lyrics as ill-considered as the title. By the
20th time Weller sings "We gotta bring back the funk, ya'll/ We gotta bring
back the love ya'll," you'll wish it was an instrumental. Still, it beats
his perplexing order to "sing you little fuckers/ Sing like you got no
choice" on the brittle trad-rock of "Come On/Let's Go".
So it's not perfect by any stretch of the imagination, but even when the
lyrics are tolerable at best it's tough to argue with lean rockers like
"Blink and You'll Miss it" and "From the Floorboards Up", both of which
showcase monster choruses and plenty of winding, heavily distorted lead
guitar. What really struck me as I listened to As Is Now, though, is how
much it grew on me. Where on the first listen I found it merely okay, it's a
record that reveals itself as a work of surprising depth and detail when you
give it multiple spins and start noticing things like the clever trombone
counterpoint in the verses of "Here's the Good News". For a guy with nothing
left to prove, Weller sounds determined not to fade away, and
as long as he keeps making records like this every couple of years, there's
no danger of that happening.
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