SLOW DAZZLEJohn CaleProg Related |
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Album opener Mr Wilson rates with the best of Cale's ballads on the beautiful but ironically titled Vintage Violence. From there the rest of side one slowly descends in quality till we get to Rolleroll, an annoying dirge that has Cale shouting the title phrase constantly towards the end backed by 'gospel vocals'.
Side two likewise opens with the best when John's cover of Heartbreak Hotel comes crawling out of the darkness. Comfortable as a beautiful balladeer and a proto-punker, Hotel has Cale pre-dating post-punk gothic rock with this dark droning deconstructionist version of the Presley classic that features futuristic 'scary' synthesizer textures from Brian Eno. Hotel is nice stuff, great dark humor and way ahead of it's time. Ski Patrol, which follows, has John back to his pleasant artsy pastoral mellow rock mode. I'm not the Loving Kind is nice, but the chorus comes on a little too heavy. The last two songs on side two end the side on a bad note, particularly the narrative on The Jeweller.
I guess you could call this a typical mid-70s album by John Cale, some good stuff, and some not so good.
In my view, "Guts", "Mr Wilson" and "I'm not the Loving Kind" are all first rate songs. The first is probably the strongest rocker Cale has ever come up with (and definitely the bleakest); the second is an exquisite ballad which sounds like an escapee from the masterly PARIS 1919; and the third is an overly lush ballad on the subject of sexual impotence. (It opens with these lyrics, exquisitely intoned: "When my lady passes me by, I lose the love I thought I had in mind....")
If you happen to have a John Cale compilation which features all three of the above-mentioned tracks, you need not bother with the rest of the album. You could buy THE ISLAND YEARS, of course, a two-disc set which combines SLOW DAZZLE with all of FEAR and HELEN OF TROY, both of which are superior. As a collection, THE ISLAND YEARS really can't be faulted, especially since it contains some first-rate bonus material.
Anyway, you'll probably want to hear Cale's notorious cover version of "Heartbreak Hotel", but the piano-and-voice-only version on FRAGMENTS OF A RAINY SEASON is much more chilling than SLOW DAZZLE's Grang Guignol performance. Still, "Heartbreak Hotel" (as played here) is what I'd call one of the "interesting" tracks, together with "The Jeweller", which is really no more than a Poe-esque horror story, read out by Cale in his most lugubrious Welsh accent.
The remainder of the album is throwaway pop. By the way, I've always assumed Cale was trying to make a commercial album at the time, but by including at least three tracks on scary or unsavoury subjects he immediately sank his own ship. And a good thing too, since that allowed him to become a mentor to Patti Smith and the entire punk/New Wave movement.
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