BE-BOP DELUXE: SUNBURST FINISH (1976)
1) Fair Exchange; 2) Heavenly
Homes; 3) Ships In The Night; 4) Crying To The Sky; 5) Sleep That Burns; 6)
Beauty Secrets; 7) Life In The Air Age; 8) Like An Old Blues; 9) Crystal
Gazing; 10) Blazing Apostles.
Turning temporary session player Andy Clark
into the band's resident keyboard master was probably not the main reason why Sunburst Finish might look like a
serious improvement over the «sophomore slump». After all, he is never credited
for any songwriting, nor is he some sort of Rick Wakeman, capable of adding
exciting (if not always meaningful) passages to melodically unexciting
compositions. On the other hand, fleshing the band out with an additional layer
of sound could somehow have brought
about a more disciplined approach to songwriting... well, the point is, Sunburst Finish is a little less about
virtuoso guitar playing than Axe Victim,
and a little more about meaningful hooks than Futurama. In other words, all the three albums of Be-Bop Deluxe's
«glam» period are similar, yet all are also different.
Although ʽFair Exchangeʼ opens the record with
feedback blasts, these are quickly replaced by quite modern-sounding
synthesizer patterns — inspired, one might add, not so much by the robotic
fantasies of Kraftwerk as by the idealistic pulsations of Who's Next: modern they might be, but the New Wave penchant for «refrigerator
electronica» had not yet caught up with Nelson by that particular point in
time. In fact, electronic pulses soon give way to good old-fashioned rock and
roll guitars (playing a riff akin to AC/DC's ʽHigh Voltageʼ), enhanced with a
grand piano sound that seemes to show Roy Bittan's influence. Bruce Springsteen
meets the Young brothers — hey, that could actually work, and on ʽFair Exchangeʼ, it does. As is often the case, it is
hard to get what the song is about, but it is definitely about somebody's
highbrowed anger, and the riffs,
solos, and keyboard enhancements are all in agreement on that.
However, Nelson is willing to compromise his
artistic integrity even further: ʽShips In The Nightʼ, released as the «commercially
oriented» single from the album, is basically a ska song, tripped up and decorated with artsy passages, but, in the
end, with an overall message that is hardly much different from that of
ʽOb-La-Di Ob-La-Daʼ: "Without love, we are like ships in the night,
selling our souls down the river", sung to a boppy, cheery pattern. There
is not that much guitar on the song at all — it is primarily driven by the
rhythm section and the keyboards, culminating in a «mock-sax» electronic solo
that almost puts the song in campy parody territory. Who knows, maybe it was a parody — Nelson's ironic take on a
«commercial» tune that paid off very well, since the song became Be-Bop
Deluxe's highest point on the charts. But I think that it must only have soured
Bill's impression of the true meaning of «chart life» even further.
That said, ʽShips In The Nightʼ is hardly the
best choice to convey the general spirit of the album. Such a choice could, for
instance, be ʽSleep That Burnsʼ, an ambitious chunk of composing that rolls
through hard-rocking choo-choo sections, music hall extravaganzas, psychedelic
interludes with backwards solos, and finally explodes after a massive
guitar/keyboard build-up in the coda. And it does have a catchy chorus behind all that, despite its primary goal
of conveying an atmosphere of hyperactive personal torment: the «sleep that
burns» in question is of a kind that causes the patient to chuck his TV out of
the window rather than pop pills and moonwalk. Emphasis is always on burning,
not on sleeping (or not sleeping).
Or it could be Nelson's equivalent of the power
ballad spot — ʽHeavenly Homesʼ, an inspiring mix of romantic piano, acoustic
guitar, and glam riffs that, once again, sounds like an arithmetic mean between
Bowie and Hammill, but grander than the former and more «song-like» than the
latter. For all his irony and cynicism, Nelson has nothing against the old
heart-on-sleeve trick from time to time, except that he never forgets to back
it up with a return to harsh reality — ʽHeavenly Homesʼ joyfully flutters past
the stars for several minutes before smashing, full speed, into the hardbodied
asteroid of the "Heavenly homes... are hard to find..." chorus, set
to a variation on Pink Floyd's descending/ascending ʽEchoesʼ riff for a sharp
doom-laden effect.
Since most of the songs are marinated in the
same musical and lyrical idiom, it makes little sense to comment on all of
them: chances are that if you like one, you'll like the rest as well, so a thumbs up
is quite imminent. But note that it also makes sense to hunt for the CD
reissue, which adds three interesting bonus tracks: an almost totally
instrumental psycho-funk jam (ʽShineʼ), a dark romantic ballad with a surprisingly
tender and introspective underbelly (ʽSpeed Of The Windʼ), and a slow
dance-style B-side with a psychedelic guitar/synth duet (ʽBlue As A Jewelʼ) —
all three are curious in their own ways, and all three are quite different from
the average style of the album itself.
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