Last time around,
Ric Ocasek went for a big sound in an attempt at a big comeback, enlisting
Smashing Pumpkin Billy Corgan as a co-producer for about half the album and using such alt-rock luminaries as Bad Religion guitarist
Brian Baker and
Hole/
Smashing Pumpkin alumna
Melissa Auf der Maur as bassist. The record may have worked but it wasn't a hit, and
Ocasek retreated back to his lucrative career as a producer, taking a full eight years to deliver his next solo album, 2005's
Nexterday. This is pretty much the opposite of 1997's
Troublizing:
Ocasek plays nearly every instrument himself and maintains an appealingly relaxed vibe for the entirety of this 11-track album. While he doesn't necessarily stretch himself here, he doesn't sound as if he's resting on his laurels, either. The songs are lean and well constructed, the production is uncluttered yet with enough subtle details to keep things from sounding samey, and every once in a while he'll throw in a curveball -- as in how "Don't Lose Me" shares the same light yet tightly wound feel as
Lindsey Buckingham's frenzied work on
Fleetwood Mac's
Tusk, or how "I'm Thinking" reworks the riff from
Status Quo's "Pictures of Matchstick Men" -- that keeps the record from being predictable. There's no denying that
Nexterday was deliberately made on a small scale: not only was it essentially homemade, but the songs are minimalist pop -- they're catchy, but the clean lines and quiet nature of the production requires active participation from the listener. At this point, some 20 years after the peak of
the Cars' popularity,
Ocasek's audience is small and faithful, willing to take the effort to get to know a new record, and once they spend some time with
Nexterday, they'll find this is another charming, ingratiating, low-key record from an artist whose solo career has pretty much been devoted to charming, ingratiating, low-key records.