Marc Ribot – Map Of A Blue City: Album Review

First vocal album from famed inventive guitarist Marc Ribot. Roots, bossa nova, no-wave, free jazz and noise all feature on Map Of A Blue City โ€“ an album that took 30 years to become a reality.

Release Date:  23rd May 2025

Label: New West Records

Formats: CD / Vinyl / Digital


AN IMPRESSIVE RANGE OF MUSICAL STYLES

Thereโ€™s a strong possibility that your record collection features, somewhere, the imaginative, inventive guitar playing of Marc Ribot.  Over the years, heโ€™s collaborated with Tom Waits, Elvis Costello, John Zorn, Wilson Pickett, Marianne Faithfull, Caetano Veloso, Solomon Burke, Neko Case, Robert Plant & Alison Krauss and many, many others.

Map of a Blue City is, however, the first album to prominently feature Marcโ€™s gritty, earthy, sincere vocals.  Itโ€™s an album that encompasses an impressive range of musical styles that include roots, bossa nova, blues, no-wave, and free jazz, incorporates multiple flashes of fretboard brilliance and which, perhaps most impressively, demonstrates a creative, perceptive lyrical talent that maybe few imagined ever existed.


HISTORY BOURN GRACEFULLY

Most of the songs on Map Of A Blue City are Marcโ€™s own and some of them have been in existence for a long, long time.ย  Since the early 1990s, in fact.ย  There have been previous attempts to release something resembling Map Of A Blue City but such attempts have been stymied by over-cautious record company execs, believing that Marcโ€™s songs were just โ€˜too dark.โ€™ย  But, with the help of producer/guitarist Ben Greenberg, Marc Ribot has finally been able to fashion his songs into a presentable form that blends his lo-fi home recordings with studio polish.

The album bears the weight of its history gracefully, incorporating recordings made over nearly half of Marcโ€™s life and reflecting on how he got to this particular moment. โ€œWorking on this album for so long, Iโ€™ve seen the world change dramatically and not really change at all. Some of the issues today are the same ones I thought about when I was just starting the album, but some are things I couldnโ€™t have dreamt of at the time. But I think thatโ€™s why I was so determined to get the production values right. Recording production is really complicated, but it all boils down to what kind of room the listener feels theyโ€™re standing in.”

here are some hard truths and cold observations in these songs. I wanted the room to be small enough so that we couldnโ€™t turn away; but warm enough to feel like youโ€™re hearing it from a friend.โ€


Marc Ribot [pic: Ebru Yildiz]

CHAMBER FOLK, FLAMENCO & RAGA

A short count-in introduces opening track, Elizabeth, an engaging piece of chamber folk.  Marcโ€™s vivid vocal is backed by a contemplatively-picked acoustic guitar and a single cello.  His blood-curdling lyrics: โ€œHow we prayed around your bed โ€“ your frail heart beat out its last tattoo, till the morphine could no moreโ€ฆโ€ recall the final moments of his fatherโ€™s life and hint at more challenging messages to comeโ€ฆ

The sound to For Celia is fuller but Marcโ€™s vocals and lyrics are no less disconcerting.  And, if the mood of the albumโ€™s opening track recalled Leonard Cohen, then itโ€™s Lou Reed that comes to mind here.  Marcโ€™s acoustic guitar veers between flamenco and raga and lyrics like: โ€œItโ€™s just romantic German bullshit โ€“ you canโ€™t redeem yourself by weepingโ€ will surely demand extended study and attempts at interpretation.


FLUID GUITAR

Producer Greenbergโ€™s input is felt as a full band โ€“ light drumbeat, bass, swirling organ and swampy wah-wah guitar – provide the accompaniment for the hot, sultry, Say My Name.ย  Marc eschews his haunted, intimate vocal style for a light falsetto, but thereโ€™s no let-up in the intensity.ย  And the accompaniment is equally outstanding for the excellent Daddyโ€™s Trip to Brazil โ€“ the albumโ€™s lead single and, quite possibly โ€“ itโ€™s highlight.ย  Plucked guitar and warm flute are fleshed out by an engaging bossa nova rhythm and lashings of dreamy saxophone as Marc recites the downsides of visiting one of the worldโ€™s most diverse countries with phrases like: โ€œI donโ€™t wanna meet no local girls; I donโ€™t wanna learn Portugueseโ€ and โ€œTell them to do something about the sound of those f**king waves!โ€

โ€œItโ€™s not a blue map โ€“ it only looks that that way.ย  Itโ€™s just a map of a blue cityโ€ is the agonized refrain that propels the albumโ€™s dreamy title track and provides the foundation for an amazing passage of fluid electric guitar.ย  It makes the following track, Death Of A Narcissist, feel light and accessible by comparison.ย  โ€ฆNarcissist features some of Marcโ€™s best lyrics, as evinced by the songโ€™s opening couplet: โ€œIโ€™ve always believed in love of my life.ย  I find my reflection my one true redemption.โ€ย  Marc spices up his acoustic guitar with flashes of electric slide and the effect is deliciously bluesy.


A SURPRISE AT EVERY TURN

The Carter Family recorded When The Worldโ€™s On Fire back in 1930 and, here, Marc gives the songโ€™s lyrics an apocalyptic interpretation that reflects the parlous state of our contemporary world.ย  Marcโ€™s added lyrics dilute the songโ€™s original โ€œโ€ฆtrust in God and everything will be fineโ€ message to deliver something that is, instead, positively threatening.

Marcโ€™s treatment of Allen Ginsbergโ€™s poem, Sometime Jailhouse Blues is presented as a showpiece for Marcโ€™s sheer mastery of his instrument.ย  Ginsbergโ€™s words are half-sung, half-spoken but, really, the listenerโ€™s focus is upon Marcโ€™s acoustic guitar accompaniment as he turns the poem into an avant-garde blues extravaganza.ย  And thatโ€™s almost โ€“ but not quite โ€“ the end to a unique, exhilarating album.ย  Itโ€™s an album with a surprise at every turn, so listeners shouldnโ€™t be taken unawares as Marc brings things to a close with Optimism Of The Spirit, a seven-minute collage of sound.ย  Somehow, itโ€™s a fitting way to end.


Watch the official video to Daddy’s Trip To Brazil – the album’s lead single – below:


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