Sunday, 28 January 2018

Three piece Power Pop by Ben Folds Five - The Unauthorized Biography Of Reinhold Messner 1999 (550 Music by Sony Music)


The follow-up to the popular Whatever and Ever Amen, Ben Folds Five's third LP, The Unauthorized Biography of Reinhold Mesner, continues the eclectic and clever songwriting that has become the group's trademark. Like other piano-based rock composers such as Randy Newman and Todd Rundgren, principal songwriter and de facto leader Ben Folds combines an off-beat world view with equally off-kilter musical arrangements to create a thoroughly original sound. The pseudo-lounge break in "Regrets," for example, or the downright silliness of "Your Redneck Past" set the Ben Folds Five apart from the hundreds of soundalike bands that the group competes with for radio space.


What makes Ben Folds Five, and The Unauthorized Biography of Reinhold Mesner, relevant is their willingness to take musical risks, an anomaly in today's scene. On an album where there is a lack of instantly catchy hooks, Folds has the audacity to add a bizarre Burt Bacharach-ish horn section to "Don't Change Your Plans," one of the few radio-friendly tracks on the album. And in "Most Valuable Possession," the band uses studio trickery and an answering machine message left by Folds' father to create a bizarre spoken word pastiche.
It is this willingness to forge a unique sound that makes The Unauthorized Biography of Reinhold Mesner such an interesting album to listen to. There is care to these songs and, what's even more significant and fresh, there is also intelligence.(allmusic)


I really like Ben Folds and also this album is intelligent - witty and intelligently poppy. And most importantly, it's really fun. His backing boys are beyond any doubt and delivers the foundation on which Folds can really show off his fluent playing that he sometimes let rumble a little skillfully and so pushes the tension of the song to set his melodies in scene. Really a gifted musician and this is a very good pop album.
Frank