Reviews

Nick Lowe: Labour of Lust

Nick Lowe
Labour of Lust
Yep Roc
[Rating: 4 stars]

1979โ€™s Labour of Lust had the misfortune of following Nick Loweโ€™s breakout debut disc, Pure Pop For Now People. Lust has labored in its predecessorโ€™s shadow over the years, having been out-of-print for around 20 years. This lack of recognition, however, is quite unjustified. While Pure Pop was a splashy tour de force, Lust is a stronger overall album. This reissue combines the tracks used in the U.S. and U.K. versions (the English albumโ€™s โ€œEndless Grey Ribbonโ€ and the American albumโ€™s โ€œAmerican Squirmโ€) plus the vintage B-side โ€œBasing Street.โ€ While it doesnโ€™t hold a treasure trove of archival material, it does deliver all that you can ask for in a Nick Lowe album โ€“ hooky melodies, clever wordplay, twisted sense of humor and his take of American roots rock.

Lustโ€™s pleasures begin immediately with the opening number, the wonderfully warped โ€œCruel To Be Kind, โ€ (Loweโ€™s biggest U.S. single). The rest of the disc, however, offers an array of terrific tracks, including the dark-humored โ€œCracking Up,โ€ the sublime twangabilly โ€œWithout Loveโ€ and the catchy โ€œDose of You.โ€ The latter track provides a litmus test for Lowe listeners. This disc is ripe with ribaldry and double (or just single) entendres. From this tuneโ€™s โ€œI caught of a dose of you tonightโ€ to lines like โ€œWhen Iโ€™m near you girl/I get an extension/ And I donโ€™t mean/Alexander Graham Bellโ€™s inventionโ€ (โ€œSwitchboard Susanโ€) and โ€œGirls like that bring a lump to my pocket (โ€œBorn Fighterโ€). If you have a low tolerance for punny language then this disc might not be your cup of tea.

Lowe, however, doesnโ€™t just not flash his witty, jokey wordplay here. The spare, more serious-minded โ€œEndless Grey Ribbonโ€ and โ€œBasing Streetโ€ demonstrate his songwriting depth and foreshadow his recent, and critically acclaimed, work. His unabashed love for American music (be it rock, country or soul) that surfaces throughout this disc also helps to make this record sound not so much as a relic from the New Wave era but as a influence on todayโ€™s roots rock/Americana scene.

He recorded Lust with his Rockpile mates: guitarists Dave Edmunds and Billy Bremner and drummer โ€œSmashingโ€ Terry Willliams (except for โ€œAmerican Squirm,โ€ which was done with Elvis Costello and the Attractions). The band recorded Edmundsโ€™ excellent Repeat When Necessary at the same time and the two efforts display the group at the apex of their playing together, more so than on their one and only album, 1980โ€™s Seconds of Pleasure. Williamsโ€™ drumming is forceful but never flashy, even when heโ€™s powering songs like โ€œBorn Fighter.โ€ Edmunds and Bremner, similarly, are masterful guitarists without being show-offs. Their spirited camaraderie together helps to make this record such a great, fun listen. Labour of Lustโ€™s long-overdue return into circulation is a welcome arrival.