Following the trend, John Mayer’s latest collection of new songs references this eternal fount of sweet inspiration:
Laurel Canyon, 1971. The album’s artwork mirrors Neil Young’s Harvest and gives a hint to what awaits
the listener, and “Queen Of California,” the set's opening track, lays the groove for the album, with a note-for-note recreation of the Laurel Canyon vibe.
This song, with its unplugged, acoustic setting and laid-back lyric about Joni
Mitchell’s heartbreaking album, Blue,
could have resided on any 12” vinyl from that great era. In fact, the soft-rock
fabric of Born And Raised is powered
by Neil Young’s 1971 guitar (and hat and boots), Joni Mitchell’s word poetry,
and the letdown from the late-1960’s, when young idealists recovered from a
hangover of too much freedom, not enough discipline, and questionable life
choices - a botched attempt at hippie utopia. I guess it was just a dream some
of them had.
While garnering generally positive reviews, one writer
critiqued Born And Raised as Mayer’s
unbridled solipsism, but just like my favorite albums from the Canyon in the
early 1970’s, that’s my favorite part of this remarkable scrapbook of songs. My
philosophy regarding the role of pop music (and art in general), is that it’s the
artist’s responsibility to convey the unuttered feelings of the observer, or in
Mayer’s words, to “speak for me.” I posit that it’s not only the artist’s job
to speak for us, but it’s also what we fans yearn for. It’s why we slide our
credit card through the reader at the record store or why we click “download”
on iTunes. I think David Gates described it best when he sang, “…you want to get the meaning out of each and every song; then you find yourself a message and some words to call your own and take them home.”
My favorite track is the title song, “Born And Raised,”
which features angelic harmonies by David Crosby and Graham Nash (of course!),
and finds the tabloid-riddled artist applying balm to his “quarter life crisis”
with a dose of thirty-something maturity. In revealing intimate details of his
own life (i.e., his parents’ recent divorce, his stupid mouth, his numerous
cringe-inducing tweets, etc.) Mayer is giving voice to a generation of emerging
adults navigating the coming-of-age process in the era of social media and public
meltdowns. Andy Warhol’s notorious 15 minutes of fame prediction brought to
life. From this perspective, Mayer’s album is nothing short of a public
service. Teenagers, take notes!
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