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DISBURDEN DISCIPLE
© 2000
$15.00

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ALLMUSIC.COM
D I S B U R D E N D I S C I P L E
4.5 Stars
Disburden Disciple is a more poetic record. From the
suffocating two word themes in "Bound," "Drug free/smoke
free/booze free/Love bound/Debt free/ Disease free /GuiltFree/Love bound
where
drums kick home a groove accented by turntables and beat boxes before
the guitars climb over the top halfway through, to Js voice singing
it out, no screaming, no need to shriek when your heart is on fire and
smoldering in the ashes of slavery to a love(r) that possesses body and
mind as well. This is the joy of drowning. And she can get into the dark
space where the small voice crying for balance resides and let it open
up enough to underscore this many pleasured, many pained prison of desire
(love, romance, sex).
Disburden Disciple reveals a Jarboe we havent seen or heard before.
On "Dear 666" as guitars and tom toms are punctuated with what
sounds like the cocking of a machine pistol. And a bass covered over in
its own lower poetic excesses, Jarboe offers herself freely, speaking
to a Satan shes been given over to speaking with the rage of the
powerless, the seductive ballad of the voiceless, of Pauline Reages
O. She can hold the greasy, dirty soul and offer both sides of the irony
of cruelty. This isnt powerful; its shattering.
Recorded in Atlanta and Israelduring a full-scale war, and featuring
musicians from both places, Jarboe proves a very effective bandleader
with an elegant, dramatic sense of dynamic and pace. Her poetics are unspeakably
beautiful. Unspeakable because she gives utterance to the unmentionable,
to the wound, the scar, the empty cavity, or, as Maurice Blanchot has
said, "the disaster, which, when it comes, does not come." Or
perhaps Jarboe knows, all along that, as Edmond Jabes states so plainly
"Mark the book with a red marker, for in the beginning, the wound
is invisible."
Atmospherics bring the listener deeper into a world she has not seen before,
or if she has, she hasnt confessed it. This is the world Jarboe
inhabits not only for herself, but for all those empty faces whove
never spoken their brokenness, their missing selves, their suffocation
in the act of love: "Breathe in my open mouth/Give me your kiss of
life/Breathe on my open heart/Lead me out from the dark/Here are the jars
to save the blood."
On "Scorpion," a spoken word piece, where swirling guitars and
a slow, codeine-lidded bassline offer a tightrope, Jarboe walks out, so
tenderly, so unprotected, so full of her own disappearance and without
malice. Rhythms slip under and rub against each other, first subtly then
blatantly, licking their way up her thighs, through her belly to her heart
and power her voice: "the price for intimacy and vulnerability/Is
the ability to inflict ad receive pain/So you have warned me how to pull
back/I rub my eyes with silk threads/While knowing full well that venom
is addictive."
On Disburden Disciple Jarboes musical reach is boundless. From the
aforementioned grooves and stretches where electric guitars and scratched
phrases meet and dance to the Brechtian pathos of "Golden Idol,"
where a resurrected Marlene Dietrich sings lovingly to a ghost of the
image of Kurt Weill. And in the backing soundscapes, the truth makes its
voice heard: Out of the throats of wolves (yes, really). The poetic experimentation
on "The Séance" offers the spirit of Judy Garland wedded
to the drama of Dario Argento Suspiria as a harp and a chorus of
sirens (all Jarboe) tape her into the mix.
Perhaps the most important aspect of Jarboes recording is her willingness
both musically and lyrically, to inhabit spaces that are unthinkableor
at least seen as unreachableby other contemporary musical artists.
In song after song after the blade of loves tenderness and cruelty
lays her bare and bleeding, she offers another vein, with an open heart,
hemorrhaging and burning, completely unwilling to forsake hope and beauty
no matter the extent of horror and dehumanization. She pays the price
and loses herself and in turns gains a sense of strength and fortitude
that are fraught with the fiery truth of integrity. This is a woman who
sings of love in all its dimensions with the equanimity of abandon, whether
she does it with a soul song, a folk song, a hip hop track or a classic
40s style Hollywood ballad or towering labial rocker.
Exploitation, bliss and redemption are thinly divided territories in the
heart, all of us are torturers and liberators, and all of us slaves as
well as saints. This is Jarboes truth musically, and one would guess,
personally. It is a truth shared courageously from experience and aesthetic
vision. It has been articulated and held sacred by artists from Charles
Baudelaire and Billie Holiday to Edith Piaf and Leonard Cohen, from Rumi
to Pauline Reage, from Georges Bataille to Dinah Washington, and from
Scott Walker to Nina Simone to Egon Schiele and Larry Clark. For those
who cannot see the strength and the art of living from this stance, then
forget it, dont listen to this record, youre lost anyway.
But, if you have for one minute been honest with yourself, you know that
you can find yourself, however frightened, in Jarboes soundworld,
willing to take one more step into the center of one damaged heart as
it encounters and embraces anotherno matter how mixed the motives
in the individual search for wholeness. Jarboe offered a portrait of this
encounter and the struggle to define oneself within it and apart from
it. She has done so artfully, articulately, passionately, obsessively
and even tenderly in the midst of all the pathos and violence. She has
offered her hand and beckoned us: This is the door; step inside.
Thom Jurek
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