It's not going to be a habit, but the One Buck Guy does listen to his audience, at least half the time sometimes, so when reader Meandthereeds asked for some Nick Cave to go along with his tour down under that wrapped up two days ago I believe, I went through the archives, and behold - some Cave emerges from the cave! It has to be said that I vaguely planned to post some Nick Cave in the future, and a little alt album will come your way one of these days, but to set the tone, we'll go with something diffrently this time out.
If nothing else, going through Mr. Cave's oeuvre reminded me what I liked, and occasionally still appreciate, about his music. It has to be said that I was a pretty big fan for about a decade, circa 1996-2006 or so. The first album of his I picked up was Murder Ballads, though for the life of me I can't remember how I did in the first place, since this was very definitely not a blind buy. Sure, like everyone else, I had noticed Cave, like a lot of people, with "Where The Wild Roses Grow", the hit duet with Kylie Minogue that had the double effect of legitimatizing Minogue and push the outsider Cave towards the mainstream. But still, none of my friends or loose associations would hve been into Cave, so I imagined I must've picked up a copy in the loval library, then went on to get my own copy.
His highly acclaimed The Boatman's Call followed only a year later, and was of course catnip to brooding, angsty, romantically neglected young OBG. Then, in 2001 we had No More Shall We Part, which to me is the high point of this stage of Cave's career as a dark troubadour. Just a great album full of great songs. Follow up Nocturama was okay, but decidedly weaker, and while the double album Abbatoir Blues/The Lyre Of Orpheus had its moments, it wasn't as constantly excellent as Cave's trilogy of albums fom 1995 to 2001. Then Cave wanted to return to his noisy punk rock roots with the Grinderman project, which I wasn't a fan of, and by that time I was a bit Cave'd out, anyway.
This being Cave'd out and feeling like Cave had pretty much said what he had to say in as perfect a way as possible left me with the feeling that with every future album I would mostly buy these out of habit, while the music itself would be more or less high-quality variations on the same themes. I did, however, pick up the B-Sides And rarities set because - as long-time One Buck Heads will know - I'm alwys intrigued by the roads not taken or less traveled. But that road through B-Sides And Rarities was also kind of rocky, as ny path through 'B' material will be, and the flow of this chronologically sequenced collection was so-so, with really beautiful discoveries sitting right beside 'yeah, no wonder this is a b-side' stuff.
So, Meandthereeds' question pushed me to do some work on this collection, collecting fourteen tracks from the Cave archives covering the late 80s to mid 2000s (I know Cave issued a second set, covering the following years, but haven't checked it out), plus two tracks from his soundtrack work with Warren Ellis. Everything Must Converge - named after one of its tracks - has a ton of great stuff from his best creative period, backing for example his classic "The Ship Song" with "The Train Song", a very lovely number in its own right. This collection also has the quite lovely missing title song from Nocturama, making that another album that lost its title song along the way. "Cassiel's Song" is from the soundtrack to Wim Wenders' Faraway So Close, while I added "The Rider Song" from the fantastic Aussie western The Proposition and one of his & Ellis's instrumental beauties in The Road's "The Far Road".
Everything Must Converge also shows off a number of unlikely but interesting cover songs: Having based the rhythm of "Deanna" loosely on "Oh Happy Day!", Cave goes the full hog on an acoustic version of that song added as a first edition bonus to The Good Son, which, despite being merely labeled "Deanna (Acoustic Version)" and credited to Cave is technically about a quarter of "Deanna" and three quarters "O Happy Day!". He covers "What A Wonderful World" with Shane McGowan, who brings his usual drunk hooligan singing, which is the usual acquired taste, as well as a cover of "Rainy Night In Soho" (without McGowan) originally issued as its b-side. The other covers are a wonderful slide guitar and organ-led take on Uncle Neil's "Helpless" and a pretty faithful reading of Roy Orbison's "Running Scared".
As indicated in paragraph three of this increasingly long write-up I largely prefer Cave the dark, dramatic and theatrical crooner to some of his other personas, so Everything Must Converge is mainly built around that sound, meant to lead to a much more coherent listen than the understandably arbitrary and varying-in-quality original collection. Speaking of original: Was the original working tite of this collection Out Of The Weeds, just so I could make a 'Out Of The Weeds for Mr. Meandthereeds"? Why, of course it was, you take amusement where you can find it. The picture on the cover is from art by Sophia Zobacheva, from - you guessed it - a series of paintings called Convergence. And I'll leave you now with a short hour of quite beautiful music courtesy of Mr. Cave and The Bad Seeds, before this whole thing turns into a novella.
So, Everything Must Converge, or so it seems. Let Cave's music converge with your ears and mind, then, you'll definitely not regret it...

















