A review by The 941 and Tampa Calling blogger and Creative Loafing Sarasota editor Cooper Levy-Baker.
By the time she released her sixth solo album Stories From the City, Stories From the Sea Polly Jean Harvey had pretty much stretched her sound in every direction it could logically go.
1992s Dry was her fully formed indie-encapsulating debut; 1993s Rid of Me her Steve Albini-produced exploration of caterwauling noise; 4-Track Demos her raw, immediate bedroom snapshot; 1995s To Bring You My Love her confident, theatrical blues masterstroke; 1998s Is This Desire? her electronica-dabbling incorporation of folk-rock touches. What was left but to streamline her sound, spruce up the recording studio and record a steamy slab of hook-driven pop-rock?
Dont take that as criticism. Quite the opposite. Recording Stories, Harvey seemed to realize something that eluded many of her alternative generation peers: Rawness, ugliness and aggression are all artistic crutches every bit as lazy and retrograde over time as a dedication to beauty, craft and high production values.
This article appears in Apr 1-7, 2009.
