Chicago Sun-Times

FORWARD-THINKING

Enrique Bunbury says his new album ‘Posible’ requires ‘open ears’

- BY LAURA EMERICK Laura Emerick is a local freelance writer.

Though he’s released dozens of albums, tours almost nonstop and continues to reign as one of Latin rock’s biggest stars, Enrique Bunbury still has secrets to share.

His latest disc, “Posible” (Warner Spain), out May 29, reveals more facets of the Spanish-born singer-songwriter known for his mastery of reinventio­n, beginning in the mid-’80s as a member of the influentia­l group Héroes del Silencio and continuing as a solo artist since 1997. “My previous two [studio] albums were very socially conscious and committed,” he said. “But this one is introspect­ive, definitely. The songs are about the possible variations of your own self that you’ve left behind, and the infinite amount of possibilit­ies that you have for being something else.”

“Posible” is his first studio release since “Expectativ­as” (2017), which won the Latin Grammy for best rock album. Though the title might suggest a sense of optimism, it’s more complex than that. Speaking from Los Angeles, where he has lived for the last decade, Bunbury sees the album against a backdrop of world crisis, due to the coronaviru­s pandemic and subsequent economic collapse.

With his nearly constant touring, he’s a road warrior. But suddenly that way of life has been put on hold. Last week, he announced that the “Posible” tour, scheduled to start in September, has been moved to 2021. “I’ve been touring and releasing albums for a long time,” he said. “It’s not going to be a big problem to be off the road for a year. What really worries me is that so many people are going to be without a job for so many months. The problem is much bigger than me not being on stage.”

Whenever the tour happens, he promises that” it’s going to be something else. We will be there to touch you, to hug you, to kiss you and sing for you all.”

Early this year, in an Instagram message announcing “Posible,” Bunbury asked his fans to listen with “open ears. … Nothing on this album is what it seems at first listen.”

Elaboratin­g on that descriptio­n, he said, “There’s a lot of post-production. And many layers. There are sounds that you can hear as synthesize­rs, but they are really played with a guitar or a sax. The rhythm section might seem like it relies on a lot of programmin­g [the use of electronic devices and computer software], but there is a drummer and a percussion­ist playing all that weird stuff. It’s important to listen carefully if you want to catch the real essence.”

In terms of narrative and cinematogr­aphy, the videos accompanyi­ng this album are very much in the vein of “weird stuff.” “Deseos de usar y tirar,” the disc’s first video, unfolds like a film noir, with Sherilyn Fenn, famous as femme fatale Audrey Horne in David Lynch’s “Twin Peaks,” being stalked by transgende­r actress Jessica Hogan while Bunbury croons in a scenario that’s right out of Nicholas Ray’s cult classic “Johnny Guitar” (1954). Also distinctiv­e are the color schemes, with the use of green recalling “Vertigo” (1958) or the more recent “Joker” (2019).

“Yes, we were thinking about Lynch and film noir in ‘Deseos,’ ” he said. “I love the ‘Johnny Guitar’ reference, because we didn’t think about that, but yeah, definitely it’s there. And the colors [came out of ] an important conversati­on with the filmmakers. The greens and the reds and the yellows — it’s right there in ‘Joker,’ although it wasn’t the reason we were using them. And ‘Vertigo’ ... I have to rewatch that one. It’s a must.”

Bunbury and his team sought out Fenn, who was immortaliz­ed n “Audrey’s Dance,” the mythic scene and song from “Twin Peaks.”

“We started talking about filming this homage to ‘Audrey’s Dance,’ and we thought, what about calling Sherilyn? That would be the real thing! And she was so nice and understand­ing.”

Bunbury has gained superstar status around the world but not yet in the States. Coincident­ally, “Posible” comes out on the same day as the latest release from another megastar, Lady Gaga. With his characteri­stic black humor, Bunbury sums up the situation, icon to icon. “We talked about this, Gaga and me. We know we don’t share much of the same audience, so it’s not going to be a problem. She was a little concerned, but I told her she will be fine.”

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