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Showing posts with label Terry Williams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Terry Williams. Show all posts

Thursday, 26 March 2020

"Labour Of Lust" by NICK LOWE – Second Studio Album from June 1979 featuring Dave Edmunds, Billy Bremner and Terry Williams (all of Rockpile) with Guests Elvis Costello, Pete Thomas (of The Attractions), Huey Lewis (of Clover and later The News) and songs by Mickey Jupp and Ian Gomm (March 2011 UK Proper 'Expanded Edition' CD Reissue – Vic Anesini Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...








"...In The Right Measure..."

Following on from his New Wave groovy debut album "Jesus Of Cool" in 1978 (called "Pure Pop For Now People" in the USA on Columbia Records) - the former Brinsley Schwarz Bassist and front man Nick Lowe and his band of Rock 'n' Roll reprobates (Rockpile) needed a follow-up - and preferably one with a big fat hit like "I Like The Sound Of Breaking Glass".

Back from a US tour where the support act foursome of Nick Lowe (Bass and Vocals), Dave Edmunds and Billy Bremner (Guitars and Vocals) and Terry Williams (Drums) regularly slaughtered the crowd for mainliners - Lowe and his ageless 32-year-old all-singing all-dancing rockers spent the next two months on the graveyard recording-shift alongside Dave Edmunds who was simultaneously putting down Swan Song's "Repeat When Necessary" LP in the same place (Eden Studio in Chiswick, West London).

An arm-twisted Nick was then directed back by Columbia's A&R executive Gregg Geller to an old 1974 Brinsley Schwarz tune called "You've Gotta Be Cruel To Be Kind". The song was recorded after the final "New Favourites..." LP sessions as the group was winding down (it first appeared on a 1988 compilation LP in Britain) and Geller felt Cruel and its incessantly catchy chorus had the chops to be a radio-friendly winner in the USA. With Rockpile in tow, Lowe recorded the shifty little brute with a yawn only to find that Geller’s A&R instinct was very much on the dollar when the song launched the "Labour Of Lust" LP – especially Stateside. 

His second studio LP came in June 1979, the Columbia 3-11018 single following in July, and helped by a quirky promo video featuring Nick and Carlene Carter’s wedding and its superb UK-LP-only B-side "Endless Grey Ribbon" enticing American collectors, the "Cruel To Be Kind" single and video combined to push sales on the chipper album - eventually seeing it climb to a very healthy No. 12 LP spot in America (no mean feat in those days). Released in his native Blighty in September 1979, the Radar ADA 43 single did the same, ramming the well-received Radar LP up the charts – also to a No. 12 high.

As Geller's liner notes wittily imply on Page 9 of the booklet - Nick's been singing Cruel To Be Kind (in the right measure) ever since. Which brings us to this hugely likeable reissue – details first…

UK released 15 March 2011 - "Labour Of Lust" by NICK LOWE on Proper Records PRPCD077 (Barcode 805520030779) is an ‘Expanded Edition’ CD Reissue and Remaster with One Bonus Track. It will allow fans to sequence both the UK and US LP configurations and plays out as follows (39:03 minutes):

1. Cruel To Be Kind
2. Cracking Up
3. Big Kick, Plain Scrap
4. American Squirm
5. Born Fighter
6. You Make Me
7. Skin Deep
8. Switchboard Susan
9. Endless Grey Ribbon
10. Without Love
11. Dose Of You
12. Love So Fine

BONUS TRACK:
13. Basing Street

Released June 1979 in the UK on Radar Records RAD 21 and also June 1979 in the USA on Columbia Records JC 36087 - the UK and US LPs both had eleven tracks each but with different configurations. The British variant had "Endless Grey Ribbon" as an exclusive (Track 2 on Side 2) whilst the US LP had that song replaced with "American Squirm" as their exclusive cut (Track 4, Side 1). All songs written by Nick Lowe, except "Cruel To Be Kind" which was a co-write with Ian Gomm, "Switchboard Susan" by Mickey Jupp (credited as "Switch Board Susan" in the USA) and "Love So Fine" which is credited to the four in Rockpile – Nick Lowe, Dave Edmunds, Billy Bremner and Terry Williams.

To sequence the UK LP from this CD use the following tracks:
Side 1: Tracks 1, 2, 3, 5, 6 and 7
Side 2: Tracks 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12
To sequence the US LP use:
Side 1: Tracks 1, 2, 3, 4, 6 and 7
Side 2: Tracks 8, 11, 10, 5 and 12

The three SINGLES around the album were:
UK - "American Squirm" b/w "What's So Funny 'bout (Peace, Love And Understanding)"
October 1978 on Radar Records ADA 26
The B-side is an Elvis Costello song credited to Nick Lowe and His Sound, but it's actually Elvis Costello and The Attractions and is unfortunately not on this CD. "American Squirm" wasn't released as a 45 in the USA - is on the US LP only.

UK - "Cracking Up" b/w "Basing Street"
June 1979 on Radar Records ADA 34 - B-side was non-album and is the 'bonus track' on this CD
US - "Switch Board Susan" b/w "Basing Street"
October 1979 on Columbia 1-11131 - "Switchboard Susan" was the A-side in the USA instead of "Cracking Up"

UK - "Cruel To Be Kind" b/w "Endless Grey Ribbon"
September 1979 on Radar Records ADA 43
June 1979 USA on Columbia 3-11018 with same songs
US fans would not have had the B-side as it only appeared on the UK LP

You get a gatefold card-sleeve; the Barney Bubbles cover artwork on a picture CD, a 12-Page booklet with new liner notes from Canvey Island/Pub Rock aficionado WILL BIRCH with added notes from Columbia's then A&R guy GREGG GELLER. In-between are repro photos of very cool period memorabilia like the 'I Made An AMERICAN SQUIRM' button, the Survival Kit promo pack, Radar Records track promo trinkets, the "Cruel To Be Kind" UK 7" picture sleeve, a billboard add for the album, US tour shots, unreleased proof artwork for Barney Bubbles sleeves and loads more. The read is witty, informative and more than tinged with the huge affection Lowe, Rockpile and the album are remembered with. Tasty.

But best of all is a Remaster by Columbia Records Audio Engineer supremo VIC ANESINI - a man who has twiddled the knobs on The Byrds, Nilsson, Santana, Elvis Presley, The Jayhawks, Stevie Ray Vaughan and oodles more. I mention this because the album was always a low-fi audio affair to me and in truth it generally remains that way. But Anesini has done a clean transfer and the oomph the tracks so desperately needed is in evidence - even if it isn't as much as you would have hoped for (Anesini also did the "Jesus Of Cool" album reissue for Proper Records).

Co-written with fellow Pub Rocker Ian Gomm, the album opens on the knock me back down winner that is "Cruel To Be Kind" and Terry Williams' drum kit is suddenly Everly Brothers clear as the band kicks in. When asked to contribute to a tune to the "Labour Of Love: The Music Of Nick Lowe" 2001 CD compilation, none other than the sorely missed Tom Petty and his Heartbreakers did "Cracking Up" – and from the I don’t think its funny anymore lyrics – you can so hear why. I love the Dave Edmunds doubled-vocals on the chorus. And again the Bass and Drums of the drugs song "Big Kick, Plain Scrap" is indeed kicking and not monkeying around (great remaster, even on the flanged vocals). Edmunds again adds so much to "Born Fighter" on the vocal and guitar front, as does Huey Lewis (of The News) on loan from Clover giving it some mean Harmonica.

The US album had "American Squirm" slotted in on Side 1 and it must have felt weird (or thrilling) to have a Brit say "I made an American squirm and it felt so right…” The song also featured Elvis Costello on Vocals and Pete Thomas of The Attractions on Drums. A sort of dry run for "Basing Street", the almost hurting quiet in "You Make Me" features Nick strumming a barely perceptible acoustic – love making our hero weak and confused (a good excuse really). Things go back to beat city with the catchy-as-a-cold "Skin Deep" where Nick is belly to belly but unfortunately not eye to eye (love that guitar work from Edmunds, subtle and effective). Other cool ones come in the shape of the Rockabilly swinging "Without Love" (all by himself in the heartbreak sea) and the final slice of Rockpile chugging in "Love So Fine" – a track I always felt would have been a far better single than "American Squirm". And I must rant and rave about the B-side "Basing Street" – a bare bones acoustic tale of ugly inner London misery that used to slay me every time I flipped the single. I played this sucker to death, the half spoken lyrics, the sort of Johnny Cash unplugged feel, the tale of a cut homeless 17 year old, something about its eerie loneliness used to affect me and to hear it now so clean and clear is frankly even a little jarring.

"Each time I see her, I can't wait to see her again…" – Nick Lowe sang on the lyrically clever "Love So Fine". I suspect so many of us have felt the same about his first two albums and this Remaster only hammers home our initial faith. A gentleman and a scholar and that's just the left leg. Fab stuff and then some…

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