Andrew Bird
Weather Systems
Righteous Babe Records

Firstly, an excuse. I have been meaning to write this review for months, but in actual fact, it's the album itself, the object of the review, that's stopped me. I think it's so good when you find a great musician right out of the blue. I'd never even heard of Andrew Bird until this March, when Kristin Hersh released her finest album to date, The Grotto - a collaboration between herself, Bird and Howe Gelb. He's there providing the saddest violin you'll ever hear, on 'Deep Wilson'. That's what brought him to my attention - I'd never heard of any of his previous incarnations, much less any of his music - The Squirrel Nut Zippers, for example, or his 'Bowl of Fire', and was unaware of his other albums. So, for once, I was coming to an artist completely fresh. And now I'm hooked.

I dug around on the web for some other stuff of his, and curiously, everything I found I enjoyed thoroughly and very nearly instantly, especially his previous-but-one album, Oh, The Grandeur!. His voice is a revelation - emotive and clear, tinged with an infectious weariness, I found him instantly compelling. His lyrics are often outstanding, pithy, witty and precise. I developed an unhealthy obsession with 'Tea And Thorazine', about his autistic brother, from that previous album, that now, six months later, hasn't gone away.

And so, when in reviewing the album, I find myself obsessing over the songs on Weather Systems (which is officially an EP) in the same way. The very first song, um, 'First Song', is so harmonically sweet and evocative of a particular scene - a young boy sits, tired, on a fence and is joined by two others with violins, and they play along to the croaking of frogs. I found myself listening to it for a *very* long time in isolation, not wanting to venture further for fear of the rest of the album not living up to it. There was no need to worry: it does. Based on a Galway Kinnell poem, 'First Song', to me, is worth the price of admission alone. Each song here comes fully-formed, breathing almost, from the frankly creepy, dissatisfied 'I', to the very pretty, undulating "Lull", an ode to self-deprecation: 'Rambling on rather self-consciously/As I'm stirring these condiments into my tea/And I think, I'm so lame/I bet I think this song is about me, don't I, don't I, don't I...?', Bird seems to share Kristin Hersh's feet-on-the-ground I-ain't-so-great worldview.

Beautifully produced, this EP has a real depth to it. "Action Adventure" (Now I'm just a split in your seam/The "I" in your team...) or the startling title track, which is over far too soon, just keep surprising me when I come back to them with their wit and, frankly, weary joy. Absolutely superb.

Dermot Fitzsimons

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