Amazon.com's Best of 2000
Listening to the unbridled grief on
Electro-Shock Blues was an unsettling affair, despite the album's beautiful pop-scrim setting. So one listens to
Daisies of the Galaxy for the first time with trepidation--like willfully banging on your foot with a ball-peen hammer just for the endorphin rush. But if
Blues was about the descent,
Daisies is about the ascension toward a fragile health. "I'm feeling pretty good now," E sings on "Grace Kelly Blues." However, the music breaks and quivers with a kind of emotional instability, undermining his assurances. It's a tender balance, and no one registers the sad-happy yin-yang of life with tenderness quite like E. Which in some ways is pretty damned unsettling.
--Tod Nelson
Amazon.com
This follow-up to 1998's grief-stricken
Electro-Shock Blues finds head Eel E (that's all, just E) on steadier emotional footing, but don't expect cascading rays of sunshine to break through the clouds that cover this Southern California popmeister's world. The tone is set by the imagistic opener, "Grace Kelly Blues," which captures snapshots of misbegotten souls--a mime, a truck driver, a mall rat, the star-crossed movie star/princess who gives the song its name--before focusing in on E himself, who volunteers, "Me, I'm feeling pretty good now ... I think you know I'll be OK." From there, we're immersed in E's own version of
Pleasantville, where gorgeous melodies and ornate arrangements adorn sad-sack sentiments. In the end,
Daises is the work of a gifted composer/producer/performer who is indeed feeling OK. Not great, mind you. But OK.
--Steven Stolder