Album Reviews

Ronnie Spector: English Heart

Ronnie Spector - English Heart

Ronnie Spector
English Heart
(415)
Rating: 2.5ย out of 5 stars

Classic songs from a classic era sung by one of rock and rolls’ย most classic voices โ€ฆ what could go wrong? Unfortunately plenty.

Itโ€™s telling that this well-intentioned album of mid-60s UK hits from ex-Ronette Ronnie Spector is undone by its production and arrangements, both of which were what catapulted her to fame back when her ex-husband Phil was behind the controls. Interestingly, the short, (11 track, 32 minute) discโ€™s most successful moments come when the accompaniment is stripped down as on her version of Gerry & the Pacemakersโ€™ โ€œDonโ€™t Let the Sun Catch You Cryingโ€ and the Beatlesโ€™ acoustic guitar take on โ€œIโ€™ll Follow the Sun.โ€ But Spectorโ€™s forte is belting out her house shaking vocals over thunderous music, so this ballad heavy collection feels like trying to pound a square peg of a voice into a round hole of material.

Backing that is substantially too slick is probably meant to bring a contemporary sheen to the drum machine ladled โ€œYouโ€™ve Got Your Troublesโ€ but only hamstrings it with a dated style. Elsewhere an overly loud rhythm section and cheesy backing vocals sink the Dave Clark 5โ€™s lovely ballad โ€œBecause,โ€ a song so melodically enticing itโ€™s hard to totally ruin. And a sped up Motown arrangement of the Animalsโ€™ version of โ€œDonโ€™t Let Me Be Misunderstoodโ€ is completely clumsy for both Spectorโ€™s voice and the brooding, self-reflective lyrics Eric Burdon so perfectly spit out on the British hit version. The Kinksโ€™ โ€œTired of Waiting,โ€ is slowed down to a plodding mess that shows a lack of subtlety both musically and vocally thatโ€™s characteristic of most of this album.

Running down the Stonesโ€™ rare non-hit โ€œIโ€™d Much Rather Be With the Boys,โ€ an unusual Keith Richards/Andrew Loog Oldham co-write that is changed to โ€œโ€ฆ Girlsโ€ here, is arguably the setโ€™s most impressive and frisky track since itโ€™s one of the few where everyone involved doesnโ€™t seem to be trying so hard. ย A sparse reading of the Bee Geesโ€™ โ€œHow Can You Mend a Broken Heartโ€ with piano and organ closes the disc in a moderately enjoyable fashion.

But the lack of the Spector-ish sound, while understandable โ€” Ronnieโ€™s marriage to Phil was legendarily troubled โ€” along with material that is far more powerful and enjoyable in its original form, makes this an experiment that fails on most levels, in particular from Scott Jacobyโ€™s ill-fitting production and sonic approach.

Back to mono, indeed.