Quantcast

Call for Feature Essays About Any Aspect of Popular Culture, Present or Past

Music
Photo: Rhett Nelson
cover art

Tender Forever

Wider

(K; US: 4 Dec 2007; UK: 10 Dec 2007)

On the cover of her second album, Wider, Melanie Valera, aka Tender Forever, is meditating next to a construction-paper campfire of her own design, beneath Post-It Notes posted together to spell the album title. The inside photo shows her constructing this scene. Taken together with lyrics from the album like “Yes, the best shelter / I guess / Is the one I build for myself” or “My home is my head / That’s the best place I know”, the cover has me picturing Valera as something like the protagonist of Michel Gondry’s film The Science of Sleep. That character created his own world of quirky little dream-fuelled toys and mechanisms, yet could not relate to actual people.  As portrayed by Gael García Bernal, he was, from my perspective, unbearably narcissistic, the epitome of that romanticized notion that artists are special, misunderstood souls, which is so easily used as a cover for the most selfish and hurtful behavior. Valera’s persona on Wider is more charming than that, but there is a similar sense of someone who can engage with the world outside only through her own head, by creating her own universe.

Actually, as an album of love songs Wider is more like an invitation, beckoning someone else to come into that insular, homemade world, or for them to create a new one together. Love here is entwined with creating. The opening song, “Tiny Heart & Clever Hand”, is about a couple’s affection, and their mutual love of art and staving off danger, personified by wolves. Valera sings, “And if the wolves ever show up / And if they bark all night to keep you up / We should teach them a brand new song and how to whistle with their tongue”. Of course, the wolves are also within the lovers themselves, potentially, foreshadowing the conflict ahead as Wider steps its way, song by song, through the rising and falling of a love affair.

Whether it’s infatuation or heartbreak Valera is singing about, she’s intense about it. She has that body-centered new-age vibe that several other K Records artists share. It comes out in electronic beats, but also in mystical, visceral lyrics. She sings of love in terms of hearts, veins, secrets, and mysteries, not to mention the lovers spending every waking moment together. It isn’t sunny, though. It’s a struggle. She compares love to a war in “Heartbroken Forever”. More often it seems like the world outside is the war. In “So We Could Deal”, she tells a lover, “Lady, the world is going crazy / Forget what is around to keep you feet on the ground”. Ignoring the world around is a defense mechanism; love is a means of attempting to replace chaos with security. In “Nicer If They Tried”, she sings of love as building a shield from sadness. But, significantly, within that shield they’re sending their love to everyone outside, trying to wish a better world into being. “We love them so hard / That it could make us build a new universe”, she sings.

That universe, as represented musically by Wider, is one built from layers of voice and sound that together are comforting, though more static in nature than the lustier sound of her previous album, The Soft and the Hardcore. Besides a couple minor guest appearances, the overlapping voices and instruments are Valera’s. She plays synthesizers, mostly, but also a wooden spoon, chopsticks, an “old crappy drumset from 1981”, a saucepan, “some rice”, and more. Musically, then, she’s also building her own universe from scraps, much as relationships as she sings about them involve two people using their own scraps of memories, feelings, and ideas to together build a world.

By the album’s end, though, that world built of love is falling apart. Comfort doesn’t last, it’s disrupted by difference and turned into heartbreak. “Heartbroken Forever” describes separation in grounded terms, far from the romantic dreaming of other songs: “There’s no secrets, no pop songs, no raindrops, no tears”. It’s also, and this is interesting, easily the most hopeful-sounding song on the album. By the end of Wider, our protagonist is alone and tired, back to creating her own little universe. And perhaps happier for it.

Rating:

Dave Heaton has been writing about music on a regular basis since 1993, first for college newspapers and DIY fanzines and now mostly on the Internet. In 2000, the same year he started writing for PopMatters, he founded the online arts magazine ErasingClouds.com, for which he is still the editor and main writer. He also writes music reviews for the print magazine The Big Takeover and has a blog column on their website, BigTakeover.com. He has a Bachelors degree in Journalism (1996) and a Masters degree in English (1999), both from Truman State University, in the underrated town of Kirksville, Missouri, Though he does enough music-listening and writing for it to be a full-time job, it is not one. He has held a series of editing, writing and business communications positions at small and large companies in Kansas, Michigan and Pennsylvania. He currently lives in Kansas City.


Tagged as: tender forever
Media
Tender Forever - How Many
Related Articles
23 Jun 2010
Maybe Valera's just settling into some subtle changes, or slowly headed to some grander departure. If so, the seeds for something great are here. But on its own, No Snare doesn't quite hold up.
22 Dec 2005
This is a woman who gazes upon the wet spot in her sheets, feels her cheeks burn, and pens a simple tune to remember the complex mix of endurance gymnastics and safety cuddling.
Comments
Now on PopMatters
A Painting Come to Life: 'The Mill & the Cross' (Short Ends and Leader) [Fri, 4:00 pm]
A Far Too Safe... and Strained... 'House' (Short Ends and Leader) [Fri, 9:00 am]
'Safe House' Is Ersatz Edgy (Reviews) [Fri, 8:06 am]
The 10 Greatest Shakespeare Film Adaptations of All Time (Short Ends and Leader) [Fri, 7:50 am]
  1. 'Nebraska': Bruce Springsteen's 'Heart of Darkness' (Columns)
  2. The 10 Greatest Shakespeare Film Adaptations of All Time (Short Ends and Leader)
  3. Slipped Discs 2011 - Part 1: From 13Ghosts to Friendly Fires (Features)
  4. The Best Games of 2011 (Features)
  5. Not-So-Central Casting: Kevin Smith and the Birth of the Reality Podcast (Features)
  6. The 10 Greatest Movie Spies Ever (Short Ends and Leader)
  7. Slipped Discs 2011 - Part 2: From the Go! Team to the Phoenix Foundation (Features)
  8. Slipped Discs 2011 - Part 3: From Real Estate to Youth Lagoon (Features)
  9. Lana Del Rey: Born to Die (Reviews)
  10. The Top 15 Madonna Singles of All Time (Sound Affects)
  11. Get Off of My Cloud!: 'Collecting' Music in the Digital Age (Features)
  12. Leonard Cohen: Old Ideas (Reviews)
  13. Google and the Production of Curiosity (Marginal Utility)
  14. Carole E. Barrowman’s Authorial Journey to Hollow Earth (Features)
  15. “Don’t Let Me Fall”: Hip-Hop in the Age of Austerity (Features)
  16. Tower Songs: Townes Van Zandt (Columns)
  17. Black Bananas: Rad Times Xpress IV (Reviews)
  18. Paul McCartney: Kisses on the Bottom (Reviews)
  19. The Gay Ole Countryside (Columns)
  20. Of Montreal: Paralytic Stalks (Reviews)
  21. Counterbalance No. 67: John Coltrane’s 'A Love Supreme' (Sound Affects)
  22. Nick Cave’s The Death of Bunny Munro: A Rock Star’s Midlife Crisis or Valid Literature? (Features)
  23. The 10 Best John Coltrane Solos (Sound Affects)
  24. A Look to the Past, An Insight Into the Present: The Use of Gender in 'Mad Men' (Features)
  25. A Tale of How Great Journalism Became Revisionist History: Grambling State U Football (Columns)
  26. Chairlift: Something (Reviews)
  27. Mark Lanegan Band: Blues Funeral (Reviews)
  28. The Asteroids Galaxy Tour - "Heart Attack" (Cosmic Kids Remix) (PopMatters Premiere) (Mixed Media)
  29. The Barbaric (and Poetic) Yawp of Shelby Lynne (Notes from the Road)
  30. After Cease to Exist: The Far-from-Final Report of Throbbing Gristle (Features)
PM Picks
Music Archive
Announcements
Ratings

10 - The Best of the Best

9 - Very Nearly Perfect

8 - Excellent

7 - Damn Good

6 - Good

5 - Average

4 - Unexceptional

3 - Weak

2 - Seriously Flawed

1 - Terrible

© 1999-2012 PopMatters.com. All rights reserved.
PopMatters.com™ and PopMatters™ are trademarks
of PopMatters Media, Inc.

PopMatters is wholly independently owned and operated.
PopMatters is a member of BUZZMEDIA Music, MOG and Guardian Select.