Week 10: the Lathums- From Nothing to a Little Bit More

After the success of their debut album, it was always going to be a complex task to make the second record just as good or better than the debut. So many have yet to live up to the expectations of their debut because they gave everything to ensure they would spark instant attention, so they appear to fall short either through sheer panic or loss of creativity. Unfortunately, if the second album is a miss, the attention seems to dwindle, and you fall down the pecking order on the festival bill. After “How Beautiful Life Can Be”, could “From Nothing to a Little Bit More” live up to the expectations the fans and listeners demanded?

Well, although the album is more in-your-face this time. There is still that formula the band used from the debut. The biggest shock, despite being signed to his label, is the band hasn’t brought in the Coral’s James Kelly on production and opted for Jim Abiss, who produced the Artic Monkeys record “Whatever People Say I am, That’s What I’m Not” and of course “19” and “21” by Adele. As you can see from the albums mentioned that Jim has a good track record of producing brilliant records. The opener ‘the Struggle’ further proves Jim’s pedigree.

The song is about a relationship split, where once again, just like he did on the reflective tracks on the debut, Alex Moore bares his soul. It may be a slow song, but the tempo goes up in the chorus fit for the arenas and festivals they will be playing in shortly. A few fans think this is when Alex is at his best.

Four teasers were released before the album, and the consensus appears that the former is the best. However, I beg to differ. ‘Sad Face Baby’ sounds similar to the Stereophonics and a bombastic chorus where Alex belts it out. The same goes for ‘Say My Name’. Yes, reflective songs are good from time to time, but it is the energetic ones that get the crowd going, like the two mentioned above. 

You would have noticed upon listening that the album is packed with attitude and full-on rock. Still, as with any record and during live performances, the tempo inevitably drops to settle everyone down. ‘I Know Pt 1’ is a slow-tempo track with a plodding soft electric guitar, which reminded me of 50 rock or ‘Unchained Melody’ by the Righteous Brothers. It surprised me because I wasn’t expecting a band full of 20-somethings to use that concept. Many would struggle to know who Buddy Holly is, yet alone be able to know the kind of melodies adopted in that era. Then another slow one is ‘Lucky Bean’, and I could hear ‘Rotterdam’ by the Beautiful South.

Their albums are pretty balanced in their career so far. The attitude and reflective tracks share them. I do not see any issue with this, but some out there would rather have a record packed with energy and less reflective moments. It could be what the band is known for when they go into the studio. As long as it makes a live performance flow, who cares? 

It was a surprise when fan favourite ‘Crying Out’ didn’t make it on the debut, and it is even more of a surprise that the band included it on this album when the four-year-old song was not considered good enough before. The track in question is part acoustic, part electric. The song begins with Alex singing softly over an acoustic guitar before the song explodes, with Alex screaming out the vocals to match the tempo. Because the fans class it as their favourite, and it was well received on the ‘How Beautiful Life Can Be’ tour, I imagine the band only felt it was right to include it on their second record.

Alex’s songwriting has improved since the debut, evident on the closer ‘Undeserving’, their ‘Champagne Supernova’ moment. The song is eight minutes. I prefer this to the debut. The songwriting is better, and the overall production will be brilliant when they promote on the road.

9/10

Song recommendations: ‘Sad Face Baby, ‘Lucky Bean’, ‘Crying out’

Week 41: Paul Heaton & Jacqui Abbot- N.K-Pop

I reviewed their previous and fourth album in 2020, so an introduction is unnecessary. One thing you will notice with the album is it is based around conversations in the pub. A place which Paul used to frequent until he became teetotal several years ago now.

The music is uptempo, as you can imagine with most of Paul’s work, be it with Jacqui, solo, his former band the Beautiful South, and his first mainstream band the Housemartins. The opener is ‘the Good Times’ and is centred around a pub landlord by the fireplace sitting by himself, I imagine, a few hours after closing. Yes, the lyrics are laced with melancholy and anti-establishmentarianism, but the songs tend to be uptempo, ranging from ska to rock. Going back to those mentioned earlier, the song isn’t so cheerful when you hear the lyrics where the landlord is lamenting the death of his wife and feeling somewhat guilty for contributing to her demise.

Uptempo instrumentals wrapped around melancholic lyrics. This seems to be the pattern for the rest of the record. What surprised me was the scare use of attacking the establishment, which Paul likes to do regularly.

The standout performance on the album has to be by the other half of the duo, Jacqui Abbot. I saw a few live performances of some of the songs from “NK-Pop”, and Jacqui’s vocals were tremendous and seemed to work well with Paul’s quintessential brooding vocals. Again, just like Paul, she isn’t afraid to mince her words, and if you have crossed her on social media, trust me, you know how brutally honest she is.

This record remains on the same wavelength as their Beautiful South days with horns, piano, ska, rock, Motown, country, and pop. My favourite on the album will come as no surprise to those who know me personally, and that is ‘My Mother’s Womb’; the song is about being anti-patriotic and fits well with Paul’s political opinions. Very unusual for such outspoken artists. This was the only political song I could find off the record.

I highly recommend ‘Too Much for One(Not Enough for Two). We have a bouncy piano with bombastic horns, Paul’s mid-range vocals complimented by Jacqui’s high and loud vocals. With Jacqui shining throughout. This reminded me so much of the Beautiful South in its prime.

Song recommendations: ‘My Mother’s Womb’, ‘Too Much for One(Not Enough for Two)’, ‘the Good Times’ 

8/10

Week Eleven: Paul Heaton & Jacqui Abbott- Manchester Calling

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Although their band, the Beautiful South, broke up in 2007 and they got together as a duo in 2014, there are still signs that they have kept alive the spirit of the band, and that is very evident in this latest record. You have those typical Beautiful South-sounding songs. Although you may be familiar with the wall of sound in this fourth album, it is also their most original record.

Paul Heaton, as we know, is very set in his ways and doesn’t care for adapting his style for the modern world, but on this album, he gave most of the control to Johnny Lexus and his musicians to give the record a more modern feel blended with Paul’s timelessness.

From the opening bell, you are greeted with the in-your-face rock n roll track “the Only Exercise I Get is You”. Now, after just the first track, I am already paying full attention as an album that usually starts with a bang suggests it will keep improving. Then you have tracks like “All of My Friends” and “Big News in a Little World”, which follow in the same vein, but Johnny has added sprinkles of modern computerised technology in there with loops, electronic strings and samples over this 16-track record. It also works whether he has used ProTools, Cubase or Logic. Fair play to Paul for letting go and putting faith in his regular collaborator, Johnny, to give this album a different feel.

“MCR Calling”, however, is a darker sound, which fits in with the lyrics. Paul and Jacqui lament how the city has changed recently, has lost its originality, and is falling victim to the falseness we see infecting almost every city. I wonder if Gary Neville will enjoy the song’s last verse, which mentions his head being on a spike.

Regardless of the originality of this record, it is still quintessentially Paul Heaton with its timeless lyrics and catchy songs. There’s nothing artificial about it, and it focuses on Paul’s knowledge of life lessons, stories of real issues across the spectrum, embracing the losers and littered with comedy. A prime example would be “Somebody’s Superhero” and “If You Could See Your Faults”.

I love his wordplay and poetry on this album, and it is very much what Paul is known for. Although there have been severe and very personal issues on his tracks with the Beautiful South, as a solo artist or with Jacqui Abbott, it still has a very comedic feel despite the nature. For example, in “So in Love”, there is a verse that says “promise of wedlock” followed by “trapped in a permanent headlock”. That’s the kind of point I am trying to convey when I mentioned his songs laced with comedy, yet aggressive, too. This is a bit like the message conveyed in the Beautiful South song “Don’t Marry Her”, sung beautifully by Jacqui Abbott. It is hilarious, yet serious simultaneously with lines like “She’ll grab your sweaty bollocks, then slowly raise her knee, don’t marry her, fuck me”. Do you see? Funny and fucking violent.

On my coda (Most use the typical cliche of the final note.), it doesn’t matter what genre Paul might write for; he will always use his trademark lyrics and get the producer to get the music to compliment them. Although the Beautiful South have been disbanded for over thirteen years, they are kept alive in Paul’s music. When he and Jacqui get together, you feel like the band never went away. I have yet to say much about Jacqui in this review, which is not discrediting her contribution to the record, but Paul is the songwriter. I would be lying if I didn’t say Jacqui was as brilliant as she always is because she was. Her vocals still sound as fresh as when she took over from Briana Corrigan in 1994. The album hit a lull for me after the first four tracks but picked up after the halfway point, so all-in-all, it’s an outstanding, funny and sobering record. 8/10