Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Music Review: Peter Murphy - "I Am My Own Name"

It's been ages folks, but we're back with more music and show reviews for your reading pleasure. A little late to the bandwagon, surely, but as a welcome back to everyone, today's Music Review will be on Peter Murphy's second single off of Lion, "I Am My Own Name."

Peter Murphy, 2014.
Murphy approaches Lion from an interesting standpoint - it will be his tenth album (ninth studio), the follow-up to his successful rock monster Ninth (his prior work has categorically fit under pop rock where Ninth became his first solo album to firmly grasp the rock field and take it by force), and an album born mostly during a time where the singer revisited the vast catalog of his original band, British post-punk act Bauhaus.

"I Am My Own Name" is a healthy dose of everything you expected given the above (a very gutsy, complicated mesh of emotion and freedom), and yet Murphy surprises the listener by throwing in something utterly new and foreign - synthesizers in a Numan meets Reznor-esque produced dance track for the dispossessed.

The song opens with moody electric violin work from current bass guitarist and violinist, Emilio "Zef Noise" China. In a style that classically eludes to the Middle East (which Murphy, who has called Turkey home for the last roughly 20 years, has done on nearly every album, both subtly and dramatically), this soft introduction begs the question of "What is he doing? What does Murphy got up his sleeve?"

The vocals then kick in, smooth at first, but then with an edge, a harsh scream as Murphy declares that he is "[his] own name." The song then gains in tempo, guitars and drums starting as Murphy tells his story of who he is and is not, merely to say that he is his own name, for what that may or may not mean.

"I Am My Own Name" lyrically appears to focus on some of the recent naysayers who have criticized Muphy both professionally and personally. Some such lyrics include at the beginning "No thin Pixie/white and drawn/no shaded shadow...no jaded shock star..." (Apologies for any errors in the lyrics as they've not been published and this is a best guess) The first part about not being a pixie could be a reference back to the Bauhaus song "Crowds" which has the line "A slim Pixie, thin and forlorn," suggesting that he may not be so innocent and gullible, in a sense, as he was when younger and also not depressed as many have been led to think (also in line with the upbeat tone of the music). "No shaded shadow" to perhaps mean he is no longer going to "hide in the shadows" and not do certain things because it is frowned upon, and not a jaded shock star as there is more value in his work than just going for the easy shock that many stars today try for.

Whether these interpretations hold any merit is, of course, unclear. However, Murphy takes us down an interesting journey with this song, proving once more that he can do something incredibly different, yet still make it his own without alienating the listener. One thing is for certain with this song - if it is performed live and no one is moved by it, either physically or emotionally, nothing will move them.


Lion, produced by Killing Joke's Youth, roars to life June 3rd. Murphy kicks off his North American tour to support Lion June 9th in New York and will visit Austin July 29th at The Belmont (regular and VIP tickets on sale now). Finally, Murphy is in the middle of a Pledge Music campaign to fund the release of a live DVD from the Mr. Moonlight Tour. Check it out here and support today!