In some ways, 1997's
I Feel a Bit Normal Today is
Chris Butler's first proper solo album, after 30 years in music. Tenures with
the Numbers Band,
Tin Huey, and
the Waitresses precluded a proper solo career in the '70s and early '80s, and when
Butler finally got around to making records under his own name in the mid-'90s, he started with a pair of bizarre formal experiments. The Devil Glitch, a 69-minute song with no instrumental solos and no repeated lyrics, earned
Butler a slot in the Guinness Book of World Records, and The Wilderness Years was a never-completed experiment with obsolete recording technologies.
I Feel a Bit Normal Today, recorded in fits and starts over the course of seven years, is
Butler's first proper collection of songs, and it shows that his skills have not eroded since his
Tin Huey/Waitresses days. The songs are less overtly humorous and have a bit more emotional depth than before; for all the funny lines in "Le French Movie,"
Butler's portrait of an awkward reunion with a college girlfriend is more wistful than sarcastic. Similarly, "Capitalism" and "Gun Day" treat their subjects, a Walter Mitty-like management trainee and a Travis Bickle impersonator, with empathy. Most of the songs are solo recordings, with
Butler playing all the instruments, but a few guests pop in, most notably
Butler's ex-
Tin Huey bandmate Ralph Carney, who adds his characteristic reeds to "I Lie the Truth." On the closing "Architect or Doctor?," which recalls
the Waitresses' similarly apocalyptic "Jimmy Tomorrow," various voices weave in and out of what sounds like a hallucinatory fever dream set to music. It's one of
Butler's most impressive songs, and a fascinating end to a particularly solid album. ~ Stewart Mason