shop | mailing lists
musicOMH
Facebook Twitter
music: album reviews
Gil Scott-Heron - I'm New Here
(XL) UK release date: 8 February 2010
4 stars
Gil Scott-Heron - I'm New Here

buy this title


track listing

1. On Coming From A Broken Home (Pt. 1)
2. Me And The Devil
3. I'm New Here
4. Your Soul And Mine
5. Parents (Interlude)
6. I'll Take Care Of You
7. Being Blessed (interlude)
8. Where Did The Night Go
9. I Was Guided (Interlude)
10. New York Is Killing Me
11. Certain Things (Interlude)
12. Running
13. The Crutch
14. I've Been Me (Interlude)
15. On Coming From A Broken Home (Pt. 2)

related
ALBUM:
Gil Scott Heron - I'm New Here

external
Gil Scott-Heron


LISTEN: Gil Scott-Heron - I'm New Here

It's been 13 years since Gil Scott-Heron's last album. Such an exile is a long time to wait for anything, but it's been especially true in the case of the patron saint of spoken word soul.

The honourary Godfather of rap and the man who defined an era with the incendiary The Revolution Will Not Be Televised should have found plenty to rail against during the years of the Bush administration, but he spent most of the decade fighting the law and his own personal demons. Now, in Barack Obama's promised era of hope and change, how does the subject matter of Scott-Heron's new material pan out?

In the digital era it's often all too easy to dismiss a piece of work if it doesn't immediately grab you with a brace of iTunes-friendly singles. I'm New Here is an album in the purest sense; Scott-Heron's brand of spoken word poetry and frank recollection transcend mere lyrics. It requires undivided attention for its duration. It's a rare thing these days to come across something that demands such focus from the listener, but then again, few albums display this degree of intelligence.

I'm New Here is produced by XL Recordings' head honcho Richard Russell, and comparisons with Rick Rubin era Johnny Cash are immediately evoked. Russell provides the sonic glue for the album, laying down minimal beats that complement but never upstage Scott-Heron's vision. This is at its most effective on Me And The Devil, a dark piece of modern blues floating above a simmering bed of tension. It's an early candidate for one of 2010's essential tracks.

The vast majority of I'm New Here sees Scott-Heron looking back on his life. The result is remarkably honest; as he puts it at one stage, "If you have to pay for what you've done wrong, then I've got a big bill coming". On Coming From A Broken Home bookends the collection superbly, with Scott-Heron looking back on his early years and challenging sociologists' pigeon-holing of anything that doesn't fit in the traditional family unit. The dedication to his grandmother is a particularly touching moment.

The spirit of redemption looms large on the album's title track, in which Russell replaces brooding electroncia with a Leonard Cohen-esqe guitar, and the soulful vocals on the excellent I'll Take Care Of You pay tribute to Scott-Heron's early career in the '70s. It's his older and wiser voice that is the star of the album, and the gravelly vocals sound like a man who has sold his soul to the devil at the Crossroads and gone on to fight tooth and nail to get it back.

As the result of three years' work it does feel too short, and the many interludes of candid conversation make the album feel like it's been padded out. It's these aspects that prevent this album from being an unassailable masterpiece; for every moment of brilliance there's one of frustrating brevity. But brilliance abounds. The highlight is Where Did The Night Go, a dark piece enriched with loneliness and imsomnia where Scott-Heron's prose really shines. Running is also an exemplary piece of poetry in its own right.

Some may find I'm New Here a strange and alienating listen, but those with patience will be well rewarded; most of this album is stunning and so different from the norm that you can't help but be drawn in. To paraphrase a lyric on the album it's "hard to get to know and difficult to forget". It is, ultimately, a remarkably honest and self-reflective collection.

share
end of year feature
musicOMH's Top 50 Albums Of 2009
From the nearly 700 albums we reviewed this year, which did our writers love the most?
Introduction
50-41 | 40-31 | 30-21
20-11 | 10-4 | 1-3
recommended
Galaxie 500
FEATURE
Galaxie 500
They made just three albums, but they've stood the test of time
Jaga Jazzist
INTERVIEWS
Jaga Jazzist, Editors, The Hidden Cameras, Jesca Hoop, Midlake
Glee: The Music, Volumes 1 & 2
FEATURE
Glee: The Music
Can the hit show's soundtrack work in its own right?
released this week
Laura Marling - I Speak Because I Can Son Of Dave - Shake A Bone Autechre - Oversteps Mary J Blige - Stronger With Each Tear
Robyn Hitchcock & The Venus 3 - Propellor Time Seabear - We Built A Fire Daedelus - Righteous Fists Of Harmony Mixtapes & Cellmates - ROX
albums coming soon
Jónsi - Go Tracey Thorn - Love And Its Opposite She & Him - Volume Two The Radio Dept - Clinging To A Scheme
recent releases
David G Cox - David G Cox Lou Rhodes - One Good Thing Dan Le Sac vs Scroobius Pip - The Logic Of Chance Christopher Lee - Charlemagne: By The Sword And The Cross
Gorillaz - Plastic Beach Liars - Sisterworld New Young Pony Club - The Optimist Broken Bells - Broken Bells
Sa Dingding - Harmony Amy Macdonald - A Curious Thing Titus Andronicus - The Monitor The Besnard Lakes - The Besnard Lakes Are The Roaring Night
Gonjasufi - A Sufi And A Killer Two Door Cinema Club - Tourist History Pavement - Quarantine The Past: The Best Of Pavement Kris Drever - Mark The Hard Earth
Joanna Newsom - Have One On Me The Knife - Tomorrow, In A Year Archie Bronson Outfit - Coconut Frightened Rabbit - The Winter Of Mixed Drinks
Ellie Goulding - Lights Tunng - ...And Then We Saw Land Thus:Owls - Cardiac Malformations Turin Brakes - Outbursts
  1. more album reviews

interviews and features
Galaxie 500
Galaxie 500
FEATURE
Glee: The Music, Volumes 1 & 2
Glee: The Music,
Volumes 1 & 2
FEATURE
Editors
Editors
INTERVIEW
The Hidden Cameras
The Hidden Cameras
INTERVIEW
  1. more interviews


  more album reviews...



musicOMH
about us
contact
copyright
home
elsewhere
Twitter
Facebook
Last.fm
Soundcloud
MySpace
© 1999-2010 OMH