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The Boxing Mirror is an album that takes its time getting to know
itself; it’s perhaps a result of this that it ends up being a terribly
uneven listen, its strong songs cluttering the second side while the
first is pocked by misfires.

Alejandro Escovedo’s The Boxing Mirror, the first new album in more
than four years from the singer-songwriter once hailed by No Depression
magazine at the close of the ’90s as its “Artist of the Decade,” is
somewhat disappointing. It would not have been unreasonable for
listeners to expect that the underappreciated Tex-Mex rocker and
producer John Cale might err on the side of the turgid, given the
latter musician’s penchant for experimentation and the former’s
unabashed idolatry of the latter. But this album’s biggest sticking
point is its flat production and frequently unexciting midtempo
grooves. The sound that is most out of the ordinary here is the glass
harmonica that opens the album, but its crystalline swirl is
immediately followed by the rest of “Arizona,” a murky number that
wouldn’t sound out of place on one of John Hiatt’s least impressive
swamp-rock records.
The Boxing Mirror is an album that takes its time getting to know
itself; it’s perhaps a result of this that it ends up being a terribly
uneven listen, its strong songs cluttering the second side while the
first is pocked by misfires. “Dear Head on the Wall,” for example,
loses points for having first appeared on the several-years-old Por
Vida benefit disc, and it loses a few more for paling in comparison to
guitarist Charlie Sexton’s earlier recorded version. Its chunky bass
string section here forms an interesting, if unchanging, rhythm that
all but drowns out Escovedo’s guitar. “Looking for Love,” a strictly
by-the-numbers AOR exercise complete with banal lyrics and embarrassing
synthetic backing, sounds like a relic from the ’80s that would’ve
stood to benefit from remaining a forgotten artifact.
Fortunately, The Boxing Mirror rallies at the midway point, beginning
with the gorgeous ballad “The Ladder.” A honey-toned Tejano waltz
coaxed to life by acoustic guitar and accordion, its lyric offers
sparkling romantic imagery, making it far and away the album’s finest
song. “Break This Time” is a sturdy rocker in the tradition of such
Escovedo classics as “Velvet Guitar” and “Paradise,” and could even be
said to recall the singer’s work in the ’70s with his band Rank and
File. “Died a Little Today” owes much to Escovedo’s recent battles with
illness and mounting debt, but it is also speaks of death in a less
than literal sense, suggesting perhaps that although we may indeed die
a little each day, we also continue to adapt to new circumstances and
ultimately find new ways in which to persevere. Another new-old song,
“Sacramento & Polk” (which also appeared on Por Vida as well as
Escovedo’s 1999 LP Bourbonitis Blues), serves as an unexpected
highlight, transformed here into a fiery rocker that shares little in
common with any of its previous incarnations. It’s all streetwise
snarl, worn and drug-addled, distorted but not defeated. You might say
the same about the man who wrote it.

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