CAROLE KING: COLOUR OF YOUR DREAMS (1993)
1) Lay Down My Life; 2) Hold
Out For Love; 3) Standing In The Rain; 4) Now And Forever; 5) Wishful Thinking;
6) Colour Of Your Dreams; 7) Tears Falling Down On Me; 8) Friday's Tie-Dye
Nightmare; 9) Just One Thing; 10) Do You Feel Love; 11) It's Never Too Late.
This is quite a sad story, really. The early
Nineties saw plenty of (at least temporary) comebacks by veterans, revitalized
by the general «shredding of the excesses» of the previous decade — and one
could have sincerely hoped that Carole King could fall in that category.
Unfortunately, it did not happen: Colour
Of Your Dreams (yes, the full British spelling is quite explicit on the
cover) is about as inspiring and coloUrful
as its album cover, which, like City
Streets, seems to be making yet another point of Carole as «tough street
girl», sort of the female equivalent of Bruce Springsteen in his «tough street
guy» incarnation. But it looks fake and cheap, and so does the overall style of
the songs.
Bad news arrive immediately — the first five
seconds of the record, when a few seemingly Casio chords boink against a thin
cobweb of cheap drum machine beats, may be enough to turn you off immediately,
«now and forever», to quote one of the song titles. And while it does get
better than that eventually, this is still a true sign that production issues
have not been normalized — much of the record remains inescapably stuck in plastic
adult contemporary mode (no surprise, really, considering that Rudy Guess is
retained as co-producer from last time). In 1983 or even 1989, this could have
merely meant yielding to fashionable pressure; alas, in 1993 this means that
the artist is not sensing any problem with such an approach, and what could be
technically forgiven several years back (horrible production back then could
still somehow agree with decent melodies, see Fleetwood Mac's Tango In The Night, for instance), is
now a crime against humanity.
Not that the record is particularly lazy or
anything. Carole tries her hand at several different styles, alternating
between quiet piano ballads (or synth ballads), loud idealistic anthems (ʽHold
Out For Loveʼ, with Mr. Slash himself making a guest appearance),
soft-pop-rockers (title track, fast tempo and tough attitude attached), odd
Dylanesque blues-rock tell-tales (ʽFriday's Tie-Dye Nightmareʼ), and then
there's even a couple of nostalgic pushbacks with ex-husband Goffin, resulting
in ʽStanding In The Rainʼ (supposedly a follow-up to ʽCrying In The Rainʼ?) and
ʽIt's Never Too Lateʼ, whose title clearly echoes ʽIt's Too Lateʼ, yet the song
itself is like a carbon copy, mood-wise and style-wise, of ʽNatural Womanʼ,
what with the tempo, the broken piano patterns, the musical ascension, the
gospel harmonies — everything.
But I don't feel as if any of that stuff really
works. The Goffin/King numbers are precisely what they are — faint,
unconvincing echoes of former glories, way too self-conscious and too bent on
looking into the past for inspiration. The pseudo-Dylan song is an embarassment
— she is trying to throw up a heap of nonsensical lyrics as if she were Bob circa
'65, and she might just as well be trying her hand at a Handel-style oratorio.
The title track is bland and inoffensive at best. And the most recognizable
tune of 'em all, ʽNow And Foreverʼ, may only be so because it was used in A League Of Their Own, a corny baseball
melodrama with Tom Hanks and Geena Davis with Billy Joel and James Taylor on
the soundtrack to complete the curdled milk effect.
The only good thing I can say is that the voice
is still intact, along with the overall radiance, idealism, and charisma:
spiritually, Carole King never grows old, and that's adorable — and on a
personal basis, probably more important than still being able to come up with
unforgettable melodies. However, this does not save the album from a thumbs down
assessment. The least she could have done in this situation was to make all the record sound like ʽIt's Never
Too Lateʼ — even if the genius has departed, this might have been a tasteful,
if still forgettable, trip down nostalgia lane. As it is, it's a rather glum
mix of nostalgia with banality and corniness, hardly forgivable for a
songwriter of Carole's stature even in her later years.
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