Santa Clara University Santa Clara, May 22, 1978: Difference between revisions
(formatting) |
(+text part 2) |
||
Line 41: | Line 41: | ||
---- | ---- | ||
{{Bibliography text}} | {{Bibliography text}} | ||
[[image:1978-05-22 Santa Clara University Santa Clara page S-03.jpg| | [[image:1978-05-22 Santa Clara University Santa Clara page S-03.jpg|140px|border|right]] | ||
Speaking of Stiffs, it's nice to know that at least one of the gang doesn't harbour some kind of misanthropic or Just-Out-Of-Agnews passions. I'm talking about Nick Lowe and I'm sure most of your cretin pop-freaks out there will never give him five minutes of your time just because he's not played every hour on KFRC or KARA. Your loss because Nick Lowe comes closer to being the quintessential pop artist of our time than anyone being pandered by those over-paid kneejerks on the big six-ten. | |||
''Pure Pop for Now People'', Lowe's debut album on Columbia Records is first rate fun. No pretensions, no bull. All Nick's doing is playing music that's easier to listen to than the Pied Piper of anywhere. Lowe fails to take any form of a stance on anything and it works to his benefit. In the course of maybe thirteen songs, this Godfather of England's non-punk New Wave is able to capture the essence of every Top-40 hit in the past ten years. On "And So It Goes" he sounds like a poor Thin Lizzy, which, I'll admit, is a redundancy. From there he hits on Lobo (Remember them?) Fleetwood Mac (They deserve a rip here and there) and Paul McCartney (to whom Lowe possesses a striking resemblance). | |||
But you have to take Nick Lowe's talent seriously. He knows what he's doing when he takes stylistic shots at others. I mean, this guy has already produced for England's current leading act, Elvis Costello, and one of R&B-land's finest, Graham Parker. He's also written for and with Dave Edmunds, of whom none of you know about but whose Rockability rivals the other Elvis (the dearly departed Elvis). Further, he was an original member of Brinsley Schwartz band, which eventually became England's leading bar-room act and backed Parker under the name Rumour. Face it kiddies, Nick's been around. So buy his album. Believe me, he's no more Punk than the Eagles or Hall and Oates or Elton John. | |||
Other choice cuts include a beautifully rendered slander of my critics' favorite, Bay City Rollers, called "Roller Concert," and "They Call it Rock," which could have easily been lifted from Fleetwood Mac's ''Kiln House''. | |||
Whether you want to admit it, or not, England's New Wave performers (And I don't mean Punk, you narrow-minded Clarans) are making quite a hit with American audiences. And Nick Lowe is in the forefront. So is ''Pure Pop for Now People.'' | |||
{{cx}} | {{cx}} | ||
{{cx}} | {{cx}} | ||
<!-- I asked what about the elvis costello mink de vile nick lows concert at the sac joss center for the performing arts on june 6 and again at winterland on june 7? 6.50-7.50 for san jose and 6.50 for winterland --> | |||
{{Bibliography notes footer}} | {{Bibliography notes footer}} |
Latest revision as of 04:13, 20 May 2018
|