Bright Eyes

'Cassadaga'

Conor Oberst worries that his life is slipping away.

Spin Rating8 of 10

The bummer about boy geniuses is that they feel ancient so soon. One day Conor Oberst is a teenage Dylan, scribbling metaphors while his friends' band-camp orchestras weave daisy chains around him, the next he's a 27-year-old J. Alfred Prufrock, singing, "I got old in an instant / Now I'm all on my own."

Granted, he's not just grasping at his own mortality on Cassadaga: There are shades of Iraq on the electro-symphony "Clairaudients (Kill or Be Killed)," September 11 on the Zen-folk ballad "Cleanse Song," and other premature demises on "Classic Cars," where the shrugged-off nostalgia ("It's not that often, but I think of her sometimes") is straight out of Leonard Cohen's "Chelsea Hotel No. 2." But when he thinks about a friend's abortion on "Lime Tree," noting that he's in his own prime years to have children, these wide-lens issues point Oberst to a personal question: Is his chance to settle down passing him by?

If so, praise be to nonstop touring, because Oberst's countryish genre studies have deepened with a very adult loneliness. And the unique electronic knob-twiddling here suggests there's more growing to come. Knowing no nouns he can't spin into archetypes, Oberst doesn't really see The End as the end, anyway. As a tarot card reader tells him on the first track, sometimes the death card just means change. 

By Melissa Maerz

SHARE: