Austin songwriter
Jeff Klein steps out from the shadows on
Hustler.
Everybody Loves a Winner was distinctive in its rawness, in the sheer unapologetic darkness of its songs, as well as being somewhat similar sonically to the outings of his peers.
Hustler, produced by former
Afghan Whigs frontman
Greg Dulli and veteran
Mike Napolitano, is a giant step both lyrically and musically. These 12 songs contain within them an entire claustrophobic world, unseen by both casual observers or close friends.
Klein charts the interior, the place where contradictions run rampant and are given uncensored rein inside the ravages of a broken heart that seeks to make itself insular, one who only negotiates the world by the richness of a solitary inner dialogue. This is the sound of last night's ashes and empty glasses on the bedstand after being betrayed and left by the Beloved. Recorded in New Orleans,
Klein and
Dulli have enlisted an impressive list of friends and comrades for this
rock endeavor that holds its edges dear and flashes them like contraband.
Ani DiFranco sings backup on
"Pity," a particularly suffocating
pop song driven by a synthetic loop, drenched in strings and atmospherics. She plays guitar on
Stripped, an edgy, slow rocker that is a paean to the insufferable obsessive jealousy that consumes both people in a relationship.
Dave Pirner offers backing vocals to three tracks and
Billy Harvey plays guitar.
Klein's gravelly voice half sings half whispers and threatens to explode at every turn -- and to his credit he never does. As a songwriter, his melodies aren't as memorable as his words, which walk some line between the vulnerable hard truth of
Jim Carroll, the brutality of
Charles Bukowski, and the personal needy pathos of
Kathy Acker and the sheer ragged elegance of
Marianne Faithful. There is an elegance that permeates these songs in spite of themselves.
Klein is interested in getting it out, not right, something
Dulli and
Napolitano understand implicitly. They fill the space without choking it, allowing
Klein the room to stretch his lyrics across the musical frames to the braking point. Check the sparse horns ghosting the background in
"All I Want," as an acoustic guitar lilts just behind the lyric: "Just slow down/this will be the last time/we ever talk about it/I will learn to live without/all the things I thought would help me swim/just seems to make me drown anyhow....."
Klein doesn't give a damn if something rocks or not, he seems to care only that the song gets what it needs to have its own life.
Hustler is a beautiful dark gem that walks a knife-edge of vulnerability to the place where need becomes its own strength. This is
pop music that seeks numbness yet reveals the pure poetic wreckage of a broken heart as its exposes its wound-and its teeth. ~ Thom Jurek