Sold Date:
October 15, 2018
Start Date:
September 19, 2018
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Be More Kind
After 2011's England Keep My Bones, British singer/songwriter Frank
Turner got himself in trouble with punters for allegedly trashing the
political left as his platitudes toward libertarianism -- which he later
defined as "classic liberalism" -- came to the fore. The backlash,
albeit predictable, was cause enough for Turner to abandon politics in
his music to focus on personal issues on 2013's Tape Deck Heart and
2015's Positive Songs for Negative People. Given recent historical
developments -- the 2016 American presidential election; Brexit; the
rise of white supremacy, fascism, and general intolerance (have you
checked your Twitter feed lately?) -- he's returned from the sidelines
and entered the fray. Turner readily embraces political and social
complexities to directly examine the Zeitgeist: inspired by a couplet in
Clive James' poem Leçons de Ténèbres -- "I should have been more kind.
It is my fate/To find this out, but find it out too late" -- he embraces
its message to speak sanely amid the current cultural hysteria and
hatred for those of different political, social, racial, and religious
persuasions. "Don't Worry" weds folk to Cockney soul in offering an
exhortation: "Stop looking at your phone, and spend more time with the
do's than the don'ts...Don't worry if you don't know what to do." It's
followed by the crunchy pop-punk of "1933." Titled for the year the
Nazis rose to power, he states emphatically: "Stop asking musicians what
they think" before contrasting the political climate of the 1930s with
what is so loudly articulated in the 21st century. The blasting guitars
and clattering drums underscore its observant urgency. Punk and soul
meet in "Little Changes," as horns and layered backing vocal choruses
meet the hook and burn of popping snares, hi-hats, and punchy
six-strings. In the gentle title track, the songwriter urges us to
dialogue with one another: "In a world that has decided to lose its
mind/Be more kind my friends/Try to be more kind" amid loping strings
atop a gentle rock & roll swell. "Make America Great Again" uses
Donald Trump's campaign slogan in a weave of arpeggiated synths, loops,
and electric and acoustic guitars to turn the slogan on its head: "Let's
make America great again/By making racists ashamed again." Sure it's
preachy, but its not autodidactic. "Brave Face" is a rowdy stadium
anthem: "One look at your brave face/Makes me afraid" wailed above the
din as Turner's protagonist hopes to be kissing his beloved when the end
comes. "Blackout" weaves synths and Edge-esque guitar shards to predict
the ensuing chaos when the world's power grid collapses. Turner turns
in three straight-up folk songs to close the set. "Common Ground" is the
most appealing: "Let's meet on the bridge/And forgive." Throughout Be
More Kind he exhorts listeners to practice compassion and kindness
because, in doing so, we create a bulwark against hatred. Be More Kind
is musically inventive in its use of punk, folk, soul, and electronica
but deceptively simple in its message, which is as complex as the times
we live in