Let’s say it doesn’t work out. You cross over from adolescence to adulthood and wind up living a life you didn’t choose. The rooms are depressing and fluorescent; the people who once offered comfort grow distant; any ambition for the future is replaced with a somewhat nauseating impulse just to get through the day.
David Berman sings to one such person in “Pretty Eyes,” at the very end of The Natural Bridge, an album he made when he was 29. His friends and collaborators in Pavement were achieving a type of success that must have seemed like a dream back when he and Stephen Malkmus first met as students at the University of Virginia. Pavement had something that could conceivably be called a hit single; their videos were in frequent rotation on MTV; they were reaching the masses from festival stages and rave reviews. Meanwhile, Berman had been living in Amherst to study under the tutelage of his hero, the poet James Tate. “To do that, I got into this MFA program,” he told Frequency Magazine in 1999, “and found out I could go up there for three years and not work. It was great.”
After several failed attempts at making a second record—the follow-up to 1994’s Starlite Walker, a shaggy, lovable album he made with Malkmus, Bob Nastanovich, and Steve West—he got together with some local musician friends in Massachusetts. At the end of the sessions, they watched as he strummed through “Pretty Eyes,” sleep-deprived and hell-bent on getting it all right in one take. In the opening verse, he sings these words:
I can see you in your room at night
The pictures on your walls
Little forest scenes and high school Halloweens
But they don’t come to you
They don’t come to you at all
As far as Silver Jews lyrics go, these ones are fairly straightforward. He sings in the second person to someone he can access only in his mind. He recognizes they are at a stage in life when their escapist fantasies and childhood memories are equally out of grasp, more useful for locating the pains of the present. He offers this song—which ends on the romantic promise of “I’ll always remember your pretty eyes”—as a means of consolation and farewell.
This particular bedroom isn’t the only place where The Natural Bridge grants us access. There’s a barroom where a lonely man avoids his reflection in the mirror; an abandoned drive-in theater with ivy growing over the screen. Nearly every setting on The Natural Bridge illustrates his worldview through some sense of deterioration. The scenery is always dripping and creaking; people are shaking and shivering; the perspective is grayscale and bleak. While recording the album, Berman felt haunted by the graveyards of Massachusetts and a truck parked outside the recording studio, a former gun factory, bearing initials that spelled out “G.O.D.” Listen closely and you might start seeing God, too.