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Matt Chylak
11/11/09, 10:55 PM
John Mayer - Battle Studies
Record Label: Columbia
Release Date: November 17, 2009

In 1955, Frank Sinatra released In the Wee Small Hours, one of the most critically lauded concept albums of our time. The theme was simple: heartbreak. Ol’ Blue Eyes took the listener through sixteen tracks of melancholy, lonely and desolate standards, a personal reflection on the heartbreak of his doomed love affair with actress Ava Gardner. His strong and deep voice sang with precision and pain, living the songs for his listeners.

While not quite as groundbreaking as Sinatra’s ’55 classic, John Mayer’s Battle Studies tackles similar themes of lost love and loneliness: “the album…incorporates a lot of the lessons, a lot of the observations, and a little bit of advice. Like a handbook, like a heartbreak handbook.”

Opening track “Heartbreak Warfare” fades in deceivingly with the sound of an orchestra tuning up before settling into a soft, almost atmospheric mid-tempo arrangement. Get used to that, because the majority of Battle Studies’ tracks possess similar traits. Gone is the wail of Continuum; these songs are slower, softer, and sadder than most anything Mayer has written. The song continues along contentedly with very light vocals growing stronger until the crescendo, when we’re reminded that our singer does have a voice comfortable with forceful singing. Later tracks showcase the improvement that Mayer’s made over the years.

Now, Mayer’s never been the strongest lyricist, but most blues musicians rely on simple similes and his are usually a bit more perceptive than the norm. However, the blunt nature of most of the album’s lyrics must have given John a false sense of security, and the writing suffers. “I was born in the arms of imaginary friends” is probably the strongest lyric on the album, and falls short of some insightful metaphors on his previous efforts. [Note: I don’t ever want to hear John Mayer sing about “shotgun weddings” again. Remove that phrase from your lexicon, John.]

The most questionable element of these songs is their notably absent guitar, compared with the trademark in-your-face blues riffing we have grown accustomed to over the last five years. Most tracks find Mayer delegating his guitar to acoustic finger picking and small background riffs mixed cleverly into the backing tracks. Aside from some small solos in the lively, horn-filled “Perfectly Lonely” and the Clapton-esque cover “Crossroads,” we’re not given much improv from the talented guitarist, which will be a definite problem for many Continuum fans. Instead, the guitar sings for John, with simple melodies that complement each song perfectly and leave the listener thirsty for more.

In a way, the minimalist guitar work highlights the album’s success: the obvious thought about each and every second of the album. Production-wise, it is near perfect, with everything mixed to give Mayer’s sweet voice room to shine, “ohhhs” and “ahhhs” creating lush layers around the crisp guitars, drums, bass, and horns. John is clearly the focus here, a goal especially evident in future single “Half of My Heart,” a duet with pop superstar Taylor Swift that shoves her pretty voice into low backing vocals for most of the song, allowing it to meagerly emerge on an ending chorus.

Without extended jams like “Gravity” or “Vultures”, Battle Studies is not the blues album of the year, but it might be the pop/rock album of the year. John’s obvious heartbreak takes new life in these sad arrangements, and creates a beautiful, cohesive, and yes, melancholy, album. And while I hope that Mayer gets over his losses soon and goes back to happy-go-lucky blues (if that’s possible), Battle Studies is a thoroughly impressive work that any musician could aspire to.

popdisaster00
11/29/09, 08:08 PM
awesome

DanielJames
11/29/09, 08:21 PM
Good review. I like the album, but it doesn't hit me like Heavier Things did when I first listened to it.

dani1292
11/29/09, 08:39 PM
Good review. I like the album, but it doesn't hit me like Heavier Things did when I first listened to it.
Yeah, Battle Studies is a grower. It gets better every time I listen to it.

SpyKi
11/29/09, 09:26 PM
Love this album.

maffy
11/29/09, 09:50 PM
Yeah, Battle Studies is a grower. It gets better every time I listen to it.
fact.
good review and album.

Edit: a good, but not great album. not the way Continuum was.

JohnnyG1986
11/29/09, 10:18 PM
I love that line "Half of my heart is a shotgun wedding to a bride with a paper ring. Half of my heart is the part of a man who has never truly loved anything."

I think that's great stuff.

Just me?

SpyKi
11/29/09, 10:36 PM
I love that line "Half of my heart is a shotgun wedding to a bride with a paper ring. Half of my heart is the part of a man who has never truly loved anything."

I think that's great stuff.

Just me?
Nah, I really like that line too.

brenByah
11/29/09, 10:45 PM
I love that line "Half of my heart is a shotgun wedding to a bride with a paper ring. Half of my heart is the part of a man who has never truly loved anything."

I think that's great stuff.

Just me?
I enjoy it too, and I've never really been too impressed with him as a lyricist.

gjpinizz
11/30/09, 04:43 AM
I love that line "Half of my heart is a shotgun wedding to a bride with a paper ring. Half of my heart is the part of a man who has never truly loved anything."

I think that's great stuff.

Just me?
i agree, i think mayer is a great lyricist. he lyrics come off as mainstream and cliche but they have a lot of depth

Intotheunkn0wn
11/30/09, 05:29 AM
great review

TheRxBandit
11/30/09, 06:56 AM
Die-Hard Mayer fan here and I thought Continuum was really really boring. Glad to hear this album. Heavier Things is still the best in my opinion, especially when talking about lyrics and and ideas behind the songs.

And Hours Pass
11/30/09, 07:31 AM
I enjoy it too, and I've never really been too impressed with him as a lyricist.

This surprises me. I've actually found his lyrics to be much better than most current lyricists.

"thinking bout my brother Ben
I miss him every day
He looks just like his brother John
But on an 18 month delay

Here I stand
6 feet small
and smiling cause I'm scared as hell
kind of like my life is like a sequel to a movie
where the actor's names have changed
Oh well"

"All you need is love is a lie cause
we had love but we still said goodbye
now we're tired, battered fighters"

"belief is a beautiful armor
but makes for the heaviest sword
like punching underwater
you never can hit who you're trying for "


I've always loved his lyrics...

i agree, i think mayer is a great lyricist. he lyrics come off as mainstream and cliche but they have a lot of depth

I agree. I think that even looking at "Who Says" one will see that there is a lot of depth and meaning behind the lyrics. The song's not about smoking, but rather living one's life under the scrutinizing lens of the media and the public. I don't even like the song, but I think the lyrics are deeper than people give them credit for.

beazer32
11/30/09, 08:08 AM
good review. love this album so much.

DanielJames
11/30/09, 08:20 AM
In regards to John as a lyricist, I think he's amazing. He always seems to write lyrics that people can relate to but still be personal to just him at the same time.

whothehellispat
11/30/09, 09:46 AM
In regards to John as a lyricist, I think he's amazing. He always seems to write lyrics that people can relate to but still be personal to just him at the same time.
Totally agree. his lyrics may not alway be poetic, but he has a way of expressing feelings and situations in such simple ways.

"I don't think I'm gonna go to LA anymore
I don't think I'm gonna go to LA anymore
I don't know what it's like to land and not race to your door
so I don't think I'm gonna go to LA anymore

I'm gonna steer clear
I'd burn up in your atmosphere
I'm gonna steer clear
Cause I'd die if I saw you
I'd die if I didn't see you there"

(not looking to get into a side subject or whine about my own situation) but about 6 months ago i got kicked out of a very serious relationship and left nashville (where we were living) for good. This song articulates the feelings surrounding that situation perfectly. How he doesnt know what it would be like to even be in the same zip code as this girl without her. How if he went to LA where their life had been and couldn't see her it would kill him, but at the same time if he saw her in her current post break up life it would also kill him.

Putting it this way is almost comical, but "i dont think im gonna go to LA anymore" is one of the better lines ive heard in the last few years just because of how it's used.

Very complex situation described very bluntly. It may not be poetic but its effective as hell.

boscorelli
11/30/09, 12:07 PM
^^one of my favourite mayer songs.

DivisionStreet
11/30/09, 12:28 PM
Happy-go-lucky blues?

gjpinizz
11/30/09, 12:59 PM
This surprises me. I've actually found his lyrics to be much better than most current lyricists.

"thinking bout my brother Ben
I miss him every day
He looks just like his brother John
But on an 18 month delay

Here I stand
6 feet small
and smiling cause I'm scared as hell
kind of like my life is like a sequel to a movie
where the actor's names have changed
Oh well"

"All you need is love is a lie cause
we had love but we still said goodbye
now we're tired, battered fighters"

"belief is a beautiful armor
but makes for the heaviest sword
like punching underwater
you never can hit who you're trying for "


I've always loved his lyrics...



I agree. I think that even looking at "Who Says" one will see that there is a lot of depth and meaning behind the lyrics. The song's not about smoking, but rather living one's life under the scrutinizing lens of the media and the public. I don't even like the song, but I think the lyrics are deeper than people give them credit for.
well said

Matt Chylak
12/02/09, 04:48 PM
I love that line "Half of my heart is a shotgun wedding to a bride with a paper ring. Half of my heart is the part of a man who has never truly loved anything."

I think that's great stuff.

Just me?

I really just don't like the shotgun wedding part. That phrase has always felt tired to me. I prefer the layered simplicity of "like punching underwater" in continuum's belief to the journal lyrics in here.

Happy-go-lucky blues?
i realize it's a parodoxical statement (see the parentheses directly after that phrase), but as i tried to describe in my review (with words like melancholy and somber), this album's kind of a downer. while there's surely a more than adequate amount of pathos on his earlier works, 'Battle Studies' has a sad feel overall that drags the music down a bit more than his earlier works (but in a good way - i DID give him an 87%)