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Im not out to change the
world, advises Steely to the world via her website just as well on the basis of this album. They say
dont judge a book by its cover, and with books, thats a fair point, but albums
are pitched at audiences, and it is possible to make some value judgements before you get
to hear the album itself.
So, looking at the sleeve for the Mood Shifts
album, you get an idea of whats coming. The photograph shows a pleasant young woman,
nothing striking, not an image that burns itself on your psyche. The notes give credit
first of all to my lord and saviour and you begin to get the picture.
There is nothing wrong with presenting a pleasant
unthreatening image to the world, and nothing wrong in acknowledging a faith as
inspiration, but it does tend to peg your approach in advance to anyone checking this
album on spec.
The third song in, "Ocean In A Paper Cup."
is a further pointer to the sound of this album its what youd expect
from the evidence so far. Its interesting that the tracks do seem to merge
seamlessly into each other, with no edges, no highs or lows, just basic cod-hippy
philosophy words with smooth pop-by-numbers tunes to hang them on.
Song four, "Stone Cold," is as near to
radical as this album comes. It might make you check to see if the lyrics are on the
sleeve theyre not but the album quickly over-compensates for this blip
in the urgency factor by following with a saccharine ditty called "Amazing,"
which is every bit as bad as youd imagine given the way this experience is taking
shape.
Theres nothing wrong with this collection of
songs and thats just the problem. Theres nothing right with it either,
because theres just nothing to grab hold of. The closest comparison in terms
of structure, appeal, and probably audience, is Mariah Carey, and Steely would be more
than delighted to think she might catch a percentage of the pop divas massive sales
figures.
This is music for people who want things to be
smooth and relaxing, people who want to unwind with a glass of wine, maybe listening in
the bath with some scented candles, and a good book, and if thats the reason why you
listen, this may be the album for you. Youll need to program a skip past
"Simple Girl" which might jar the mood with its treated clap-along beat and
distorted vocal. Steely asks if its ok to e a simple girl? On the basis
of this album, it is. If you define simple as the opposite of
complicated, then this album is right on the money.
You might want to give "Fair Share" a miss
as well it tries to be rocky and tough, an independent woman telling it like it is,
with some wah-wahed guitar and kicking drums to prove she means it. Does it work? Well no,
because its pretend rocking its grunge for people who think grunge is
wearing woolly hat. So, if youre looking for an aural equivalent of a bad Chinese
meal half an hour after youve finished it, you wont remember a thing
about it then this is for you. If you like music as an accompaniment to anything,
but never to be enjoyed for its own sake, then this is an album that will suit you fine.
If you want a woman to sing to you with passion,
meaning, and a genuine feeling that she knows what shes talking about, check out Dido, or Blondie, or Elastica, or all of them. There is certainly a market for this kind of
music; it just doesnt belong in the collection of anyone who takes music seriously.
Steely by name
er
thats it.
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