1) Time To Bounce; 2) Who Feelinʼ It; 3)
Happiness Canʼt Buy Money; 4) Holy Water; 5) Soul Fire; 6) Sheʼs Dangerous; 7)
Sheʼs A Freak; 8) (CʼMon) Surrender; 9) Love To Love You, Baby; 10)
Superdreaming; 11) Lesbians By The Lake; 12) Let There Be Love; 13) Time To
Bounce (dub); 14) Dangerous (dub).
General verdict: More accurately, NOT good, NOT bad, and NOT AS funky AS MAY HAVE BEEN INTENDED.
This record isnʼt bad, and it is nice to see
Tom Tom Club still in solid action at the turn of the millennium, but,
unfortunately, it fails to recreate or refresh the goofy-creepy atmosphere of Dark Sneak Love Action. This time
around, so it seems, Tina and Chris decided to produce a relatively
normal-sounding funk-pop record. To that end, they surrounded themselves with
veterans such as Charles Pettigrew of Charles & Eddie fame and Toots Hibbert
of Toots & The Maytals fame; added a bunch of covers by Lee Perry and Donna
Summer to their repertoire; and placed a huge emphasis on pure grooves and club
atmosphere. In the end, close to a half of the album does not even properly
feel like Tom Tom Club — or, more accurately, it feels like a Tom Tom Club
invaded and infected by certain things that make the very idea of Tom Tom Club
seem pointless and superfluous.
As far as intrigue goes, The Good, The Bad And The Funky does not really go farther than its
opening track — the only point of ʽTime To Bounceʼ is to tell you that it is time to bounce, which you should do
on the very first beat and then never let go until the fadeout. Tinaʼs
sexy-ghostly vocal immediately identifies the piece as Tom Tom Club, but beyond
that most of the beats and backing vocals and rapped intermissions largely just
regurgitate popular clichés, and there is nothing outstanding about the musical
arrangement. It gets worse on the second track, ʽWho Feelinʼ Itʼ, whose main
point seems to be to reacquaint us with Marvin Gaye, Beastie Boys, Fela Kuti, Afrika
Bambaataa, Wu Tang, and, of course, James Brown once again, by way of a cutesy
pop rap from Tina (note to all artists: as a rule, the more names of famous
performers you include in your lyrics, the less likely you are to produce a
great track yourselves). The idealistic shiny chorus of "who feels it,
knows it..." is endearing, but this is not
the second coming of ʽGenius Of Loveʼ, and even that one was not that great in
the first place.
From there, we get one mid-tempo funky groove
after another, nothing particularly offensive or unlistenable but nothing
particularly inspired or inspirational, either — the whole thing just feels
like a friendly tribute to the African-American popular tradition from funk to
disco to electropop to hip-hop. Songs on which Toots or Charles take lead
vocals, such as ʽHoly Waterʼ or ʽCʼmon Surrenderʼ, sound way too serious for Tom
Tom Club, but lack memorable moments or truly impressive musicianship to
deserve that seriousness. Songs with Tina on lead vocals do not succeed in
generating an otherworldly presence, either — I mean, if you encounter a title
such as ʽSuperdreamingʼ, you may be
within right to expect something on the level of John Lennonʼs ʽDream #9ʼ, but
this here is just another generic Nineties funk arrangement, repetitive and
without a hint of internal development.
The only time when the formula takes a short backstage
break is the eleventh track, with a title one surely cannot miss — ʽLesbians By
The Lakeʼ, a psychedelic instrumental fantasy co-written with Senegal musician Abdou
MʼBoup, who plays a raga-style melody on his kora to a hissing trip-hop beat. I
am not entirely sure what this slightly clumsy, but intriguing musical painting
has to do with lakes and lesbians, but at least it grabs my attention at a time
when I am already quite sure that nothing is capable of grabbing it any more.
I am certain that the album will stand up to
multiple repeated listens if you are really in the mood for putting it on
endless replay, but in the end, it really just goes to prove how much of a
one-trick band Tom Tom Club have always been — when they play that trick to
perfection, like on some of the early stuff or on Dark Sneak Love Action, it works; when they try to expand and make
themselves look more serious than they really are, it doesnʼt. That said, there
is absolutely nothing wrong if you just decide itʼs time to bounce along with
these grooves, because Tina and Chris are professional «bouncers», after all.
Perhaps, not many people know that but there was a movie called "The Good, The Bad and The Ugly" so the title of this album, obviously, refers to that movie.
ReplyDeleteDUH!
Delete> (note to all artists: as a rule, the more names of famous performers you include in your lyrics, the less likely you are to produce a great track yourselves)
ReplyDeleteCounterpoint: "It's the End of the World As We Know It" is basically a rap-rock number where Michael Stipe namedrops notable artists of the 20th century (and Leonid Brezhnev).
You somehow didn't mention 'Happiness Canʼt Buy Money', which along with a fun title is a great track made even better during live shows. Fun album, just a wee bit average in terms of melodies and ideas.
ReplyDelete