Louise Goffin | Two Different Movies | (Majority of One)
3 1/2 out of 5 stars
Whatโs in a name? Thatโs a loaded question Louise Goffin has wrestled with since her 1979 debut at the age of 16.
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Like Jacob Dylan, Lilly Hiatt, Teddy Thompson and other offspring of established music stars, sharing a last name that has appeared on some of popโs most indelible tunes has arguably more pitfalls than advantages. The bar for the progeny of legendary artists is set inordinately and unreasonably high.
But Louise, the daughter of Carole King and Gerry Goffin, has crafted her own impressive career and this, only her tenth release in a forty-year run (but her second in three years), shows how successfully she has navigated the choppy waters of being the child of music royalty.
According to her liner notes, a key ingredient of the younger Goffinโs music was starting her own record label in 2008. That afforded the independence to record what she liked, rather than be guided by external business goals.
โYouโre stuck in my head like an โ80s song,โ she sings on the riff rocking โHeart Attack,โ a tune that lists no less than five guitarists. And like that statement, the approach to these selections is influenced by an ’80s sensibility. Perhaps touring as part of Tears For Fearsโ band enhanced that because each of these ten melodic tracks is crafted with thought and care. Goffin brings in no less an icon than Van Dyke Parks to add bold, sumptuous, even extravagant strings for โOh My God,โ a love song where she sings โEvery sunrise written/Was like a letter from you.โ In contrast, she strips the following โMade to Be Goodโ down to a solo piano opening and later expands to full accompaniment as it shifts to a Burt Bacharach-inflected gem.
Vocally, Goffin combines Rickie Lee Jonesโ subtle sensitivity with the soul of Laura Nyro and an innocent wonder somewhat at odds with her 60-year-old age and by now veteran status. But itโs an effervescent combination that connects on most of these original compositions. Retro influences are particularly evident on the charming โIt Started a Long Time Agoโ that sounds like something her mother might have crafted in her Brill Building days.ย The lyrics even allude to that concept with โMovie stars from another time/Genuine and so beautifully made.โ
The opening โSimple Lifeโ grabs a bouncy McCartney-esque bass line for a hooky chorus youโll be singing after a single spin. The title ballad shifts rhythms as it winds its way through a Nyro-styled short epic, joining the concept of movie making with the end of a relationship by including a bittersweet chorus of โI canโt make us /Something weโre not/Rewrite the lines/Reshoot the scene.โ However, things slip into love song clichรฉ on a schmaltzy duet with co-songwriter Billy Harvey for โMade to Be Good.โ
The organic, colorful Laurel Canyon-era informed recording, and the vibrant songwriting, obliquely references her momโs music, although Louise may not appreciate that comparison this late in her career. Regardless, Two Different Movies is prime singer-songwriter fare; one in which each selection kicks in quickly and, like the finest qualities of Carole Kingโs catalog, never overstays its welcome. Weโre sure her mom is proud.
