Reviews

Ben Sollee: Inclusions

Ben Sollee
Inclusions
Tin Ear/Thirty Tigers
[Rating: 4 stars]

Lady Gaga may currently be the worldโ€™s most flamboyant, disco-propelled advocate for coexistence of the artistic and the popular in music, but thereโ€™s a far less self-conscious or prefabricated meeting of those impulses to be found in the output of a guy whose primary instrument is cello and whoโ€™s gotten into the habit of riding his bike to gigsโ€”Ben Sollee.

The Kentucky native has toured or recorded with Otis Taylor, the thinking personโ€™s banjo-playing bluesman; with boundary-less acoustic innovators Abigail Washburn, Bela Fleck and Casey Driessen in the Sparrow Quartet; with classically trained pianist/songwriter Vienna Teng; and with educated southern folkie Daniel Martin Moore.

See a pattern emerging here? Solleeโ€™s a magnet for highly intelligent collaborators.

But you can also tell from his solo workโ€”the If Youโ€™re Gonna Lead My Country EP, his full-length debut Learning to Bend and his latest, Inclusionsโ€”that he knows an instantly appealing melody when he hears one.

At the core of a lot of Solleeโ€™s compositions is singer-songwriter soul-pop. During โ€œBible Beltโ€โ€”a quiet standout on his new albumโ€”sweeping horns, a graceful, gliding groove and the soft luminescence of his vibrato singing bring to mind Sam Cooke, while his storytelling blends concreteness (a dress bought at Target) with metaphor (the multi-layered โ€œbible beltโ€ image) in sophisticated ways.

Sollee makes good use of his instrumental chops, too. He overlays one bowing pattern with another to amplify the anxiety in the chorus of โ€œHurtingโ€โ€”and, in the process, push it a few degrees left of what youโ€™d expect to hear; he propels the nimble melody of โ€œElectrifiedโ€ with a crisp, funky approach to cello playing that approaches live-band hip-hop.

Lyrically, Solleeโ€™s sensibility is precise, postmodern and colored by social awareness, though thereโ€™s nothing here thatโ€™s quite as explicit in its commentary as some of the songs on his previous solo releases or his mountain top removal-protesting collaboration with Martin Moore, Dear Companion.

Inclusions is a thoughtful and thoroughly imaginative album about what a huge and complicated undertaking it is to truly relate to other human beings, what with all our mismatches in expectations and differences in background, experience and belief. Itโ€™s also an accessible one, even if the songs do call for a tad more digestion than Gagaโ€™s. Whichโ€”outside of a dance clubโ€”isnโ€™t necessarily a bad thing.