With Quality Street, Nick Lowe manages the virtually
impossible, delivering a Christmas album that’s both inventive and
irony-free, and seasonally warm without pushing any of the usual
commercial buttons.
It’s a simple matter of imagination,
whether it’s re-tooling old standards in unusual ways – like his
Tex-Mex/New Orleans take on “Silent Night”, with a dipping, rolling
groove studded with staccato organ and horns – or finding new material
with a minimal cheese factor, such as Ron Sexsmith’s fingersnap-cool
“Hooves on the Roof”, which captures the gentle, spooky magic of
glimpsing Santa on his annual round. Or failing all else, writing new
festive classics like “I Was Born in Bethlehem”, in which Jesus relates
his own story in the conversational, strolling style of Johnny Cash.
“Children
Go Where I Send Thee” kicks off the album with an infectious momentum,
the traditional gospel number done rockabilly/skiffle style, with
Geraint Watkins’ reedy Farfisa organ pepping up the rolling guitar riff.
When Lowe’s band hits its groove, as here and on “Rise Up Shepherd” and
“The North Pole Express”, there’s a swagger to their stride that’s
utterly engaging, casually propulsive in a genial manner that entirely
befits the seasonal demands.
The uptempo cuts are
balanced by gentler songs with a suburban-cabaret feel, such as
Boudleaux Bryant’s “Christmas Can’t Be Far Away”, crooned in Lowe’s cosy
baritone, or “A Dollar Short of Happy”, the resigned ode to hard-times
holidays co-written with Ry Cooder: “No more private schools, no
exercise machines, no crazy nannies getting high in the SUV”. Best of
all is the jaunty “Christmas at the Airport”, in which the prospect of
being stranded by snow miles from home – “Don’t save me any turkey, I
found a burger in a bin” – confirms Lowe’s knack for finding a new
wrinkle on an old tradition.
Download: Christmas at
the Airport; Hooves on the Roof; Children Go Where I Send Thee; I Was
Born in Bethlehem; A Dollar Short of Happy
Home »
» Album of the week: Nick Lowe, 'Quality Street' (Proper)
No comments:
Post a Comment