For reasons never entirely explained,
Bob Seger suffered a bit of a breakdown shortly after
Ramblin' Gamblin' Man, so he decided to bring
Tom Neme, a guitarist/pianist, into
the Bob Seger System to help lighten the load and share the burden. Thing is,
Neme wound up taking over the band. It's hard to tell whether
Seger endorsed his mutiny or if he was just so disinterested that he didn't put up a fight, but all the same, the second
Seger album,
Noah, is one strange affair. The band makes no secret of the change, stating on the back cover that "
Seger will always be
Bob Seger, (but) any change must come from
the System and
Tom Neme." So, the liner notes seem like a way to gloss over a real lack of leadership or a coup, depending on your point of view. This release holds together better than it would seem, but it's still an awkward album that's never sure where it wants to go. Ironically,
Neme tries to replicate
Seger's hard-driving rock songs several times throughout the album while
Seger sounds more comfortable with the folky shuffle of the title track. Of course, he can still tear it up with "Innervenus Eyes," and he delves deeper into darkness than he ever has with the weirdly intense, claustrophobic closer, "Death Row." No matter how good these individual cuts may be -- and they're certainly worth the time of any devoted fan -- they still are isolated moments on the only album where he sounds tentative, confused, and disinterested. In other words, the only album where
Seger doesn't seem like he'll always be
Seger.
–
Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi