Small Change (Remastered)

Small Change (Remastered)

The album that marked Tom Waits’ quantum leap as a songwriter—1976’s Small Change—coincided with the rusty-throated storyteller’s descent into alcoholism: Life as a touring musician had given Waits no shortage of the kinds of late nights, booze, and lonely hotel rooms he’d always sung about. Indeed, his fourth album has a unique bleakness: It’s a collection of bleary-eyed bawlers, narrated by lost men holding up lampposts or dreaming of New Orleans. Recorded in five nights with no overdubs, the beautifully weather-beaten Small Change ended up as the singer’s breakthrough moment, becoming his first album to make a dent in the Billboard charts. The opening track, “Tom Traubert’s Blues (Four Sheets to the Wind in Copenhagen),” remains one of Waits’ most enduring songs, dripping with melancholy, regrets, and a dusting of strings. Reportedly inspired by Waits’ time wandering Los Angeles’ Skid Row with whiskey in a bag, “Traubert” is a textbook example of Waits’ evocative storytelling (“And it’s a battered old suitcase to a hotel someplace, and a wound that will never heal/No prima donna, the perfume is on an old shirt that is stained with blood and whiskey”). Waits was already widely respected by his singer-songwriter peers by the time Small Change was released, but “Tom Traubert’s Blues” established him as a once-in-a-generation talent (decades later, the song would be turned into a worldwide smash hit for Rod Stewart). Waits has always been an anachronistic figure; even in his twenties, he was name-dropping actresses from the golden age of cinema, and letting his piano wander into Casablanca’s “As Time Goes By.” And indeed, much of Small Change sounds like it could have emerged from a jazz club in an early film noir. Tracks like “The One That Got Away” and “Step Right Up” feature walking bass, salty sax, and an atmosphere of hopelessness and doom. Meanwhile, “Small Change (Got Rained on With His Own .38)”—which features nothing more than Waits’ gravelly voice and the moonlit sax of Lew Tabackin—plays like a Mickey Spillane novel in miniature. And “Pasties and a G-String” is pure neon-soaked, zooba-zabbaing sleaze. But no track best encapsulates the boozy joys of Small Change like the closing-time anthem “The Piano Has Been Drinking (Not Me) (An Evening with Pete King),” on which Waits sounds absolutely sloshed—he even plays some bum notes on the piano. It’s a standout on an album that finds a masterfully constructed character singing stories of masterfully constructed characters. Small Change is 1970s Waits at his heartbroken-barfly best.

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