Review of 'Ballad of Todd Rundgren' by Patti Smith
The runt in any good litter or legand always manages to rise up and above the
limits imposed on him. Like Mozart, Todd Rundgren never wanted to be born; his
mother labored hard to put him here and he's fought hard to singe his musical
autograph in the progressive pages of Rock and Roll.
Now after a couple of years of rock plodding in sleazy, wildwood N.J. dives, a
flashy fizz called Nazz and an underrated streaming rockin' autobiography
called Runt, Todd is at last enforcing his possition as a producer-composer
with the ballad.
A balld is a story set to music; usually a tale of woe - a horse theif, a
hancing and weeping girl. Todd's music is layered and intricate but his lyrics
are easy; containing all the tragic ballad elements, only the subjects are
real contemporary. He has the ability to devour and juggle the best of what
has passed and shoot it into future perfect.
"Long Flowing Robe" is an elegantly arranged Cinderella story, only much
dirtier. It also has a great 1958 school-dance cruising overtones Bobby Day
voiced in his "...I said over and over and over again, this dance is gonna be
a drag."
"Range War" is reminiscent of the notorious Hatfield and McCoy feud, only
again, much dirtier.
"The Ballad of Denny and Jean" and "Wailing Wall" are more personal and float
in more tears than all the children in the world. The "Ballad" drifts through
real beautiful music, further saddened by Waldo the singing guitar and the
pain of corruption in original love.
A ballad is a song to dance to. There's a lot of good music, rock & Roll, Slow
dance music. About a quarter of the album consists of good grind songs.
Especially fine is "Hope I'm Around," which hit me as hard as any of the great
grinders of the late fifties. Critics tend to question Todds commercial value
and have labeled him as too esoteric but in truth he is one of the few people
around who are still writing and singing songs like they used to, along with
Smokey Robinson and Ronnie Spector. His voice too is both unique and
nostalgic; sometimes as slick as a Las Vegas choir boy, and often as strained
and honest as back street a capella.
"Parole" is the msot bitchen' track, bringing back memories of Bobby Fullers
"I Fought the Law." "Parole" hits out with hot prison jargon: "If they catch
me out of line...I'll be down in the slammer" escaping with "...guitars,
guitars, guitars, electric clavinette and plenty of sweat."
As "Parole" testifies, as well as "Devils Bits" and "Who's that Man" on Runt,
Todd pulses Rock and Roll, though it's evident from tracks like "Boat on the
Charles" and "Chain Letter" he's a composer at heart, a sort of rock and roll
Ravel. "Boat on the Charles" has a cinematic feel - a real motion media cut.
It has the most atmosphere produced around it; fog, despair and a truck going
south on New Years Eve. Listening to it is like going through a little
movie...plunging into the Charles with the anti-hero as the ferry passes by.
Though he has always created from the best of a preformed world, he is slowly
enveloping these sources with his personal vision. "Chain Letter" is the cut
which most seems to reflect this vision. The lyrics have his typical left-
handed optimism and just when they get jaded the track opens up; and
multiplies as "Hey Jude" did. But "Chain Letter" has more balls and goes
through several changes while "Hey Jude" never went past spirited repitition.
If the album seems unballanced it is after all the ballad album, yet not
without comic relief. Todd releases a little protest through some good ole
sick 'n' sleazy satire in "Bleading"; with the aid of some beercan percussion
from the noted satanic drummer ND Smart: "Be a big man/Take up that gun/If you
lose your hand/you got another one..."
Todd Rundgren has a fine hand in everything. For the ballad he mixes his hard-
edge comic book humour with the various musical colors of the putney; produced
in a sort of warped rock spcae that most people have still failed to enter.
About a hundred years ago the runt of a Sioux tribe breathed his visions on
his people. They dropped that runt crap and crowned him Crazy Horse. I think
it's time "runt" be dropped from Todd Rundgren.