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  • SF Weekly

    Identity Plagiarism

    A blogger steals someone else's life story and calls it her own.

    By Ashley Harrell

  • Westword

    Fuel's Gold

    How William Orr's quest for better, cheaper gas became a crime.

    By Alan Prendergast

  • Miami New Times

    Mold Over Miami

    The family of a dead judge blames a creeping fungus in the federal courthouse.

    By Tim Elfrink

  • The Pitch

    McCain Girl

    I worked at Kmart with John McCain's director of strategy.

    By Alan Scherstuhl

i Am, i Said

i, a new Magnetic Fields album, leaves irony behind—almost.

Michael Daddino

Published on April 28, 2004

i, aptly enough for a Magnetic Fields album, is a title with an even greater wealth of sexual connotations and typographical possibilities than the salacious number of 1999's 69 Love Songs: Along with denoting everyone's favorite subject, it can be used as a Roman numeral one, an imaginary number, a minor tonic chord, an upside-down exclamation mark, and, best of all, a tiny little penis. i as an album, though, feels like a scaling-down compared to the last one, offering a mere 14 songs instead of 69 and a stab at musical authenticity (the disc sounds more like the Fields in concert than their old cheapo–Phil Spector recordings) rather than the handmade synthetics of old—the fake hand claps in "I Thought You Were My Boyfriend" are as close to meat-and-potatoes Magnetic Fields as it gets here. I can't imagine, though, how any kind of follow-up could be anything but faint disappointment. I consider 69 Love Songs the moment when auteur and cranky homosexualist Stephin Merritt demonstrated what a total fucking badass he could really be, nailing song after glorious love song over the course of three CDs; while near-faultless on its own terms, i ultimately feels too similar in tone and sound to the last one, like it was a 69 Love Songs Superfun Expansion Pack!

i does at least have a neat organizing concept, à la 69LS: All the song titles begin with the letter "i" and appear in strict word-by-word alphabetical order. "i" is a word that could fool you into thinking of the album as a "personal statement" by Stephin Merritt rather than a mere formal gesture—but keep in mind that this "i" is lowercase, implying the traditionally capitalized "I" of consciousness and the self negated out of perverse modesty, or maybe just perversity. i is clearly, then, a perfect fit with Merritt's career-long rejection of the transparent autobiography of confessional singer-songwriters in favor of songs written with a riot of perspectives.

i isn't quite as willful in this regard as 69LS: That album had women as men and men as women singing odes to women and men and dogs and guitars and lovers dressed as bunny rabbits. I miss this in i's smaller scale, as Merritt sings lead on all of the songs, usually from no obviously gendered perspective, sometimes even avoiding matters of love and lust altogether. "I Was Born," for example, renders life from the womb to the void as an event that starts dismally and just gets incrementally shittier as you go "one more rung down that black ladder every day."

I would imagine that all this might make a normal person want to run fleeing from such miserablist hooey. If anything, though, Merritt's lyrical flirtations with existential horror are what make his songs so charming. Imagine love and life experienced only at their most Baudelarian limits, either hellish spleen or ecstatic idéal, an "outpouring of emotion/As boring as an ocean" ("Is This What They Used to Call Love?") versus "You kiss me/I'm history" ("I'm Tongue-Tied"), the former usually winning out—though, since Merritt ties both to self-destruction, it's often hard to tell the difference between them anyway.

Imparting every extreme state of mind with his unwholesome sense of humor, Merritt will gently subvert them—with an intentionally overwrought metaphor, a silly rhyme, a rococo arrangement, or, best of all, casual violence. Impeccably sung with the croak of a frog prince straining to perform his lily pad aria, Merritt follows the generic pop yearning of "Maybe somewhere I could be free" with "Somewhere they won't throw rocks at me" in the sad clown story "I Looked All Over Town," and recounts the touching tale of a senile father who delivers his daughter her favorite chocolates via car accident in "Irma." Impersonated by a sexy doppelgänger who culls, conquers, cuts, and kills for his sake in "I Wish I Had an Evil Twin," Merritt moans that he'd enjoy the fruits of his twin's brutality but "Feel no shame/'Cause evil's not my cup of tea."

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