Album Reviews
Wrong Way Up, their first out-and-out collaboration, grew out of Eno's production of Cale's Words for the Dying last year, and the result is a gem, if an oddly anachronistic one. Their trademarks haunting synth patterns, carefully plucked guitar strings, self-consciously simple lyrics, chantlike choruses and echoey production have been so plundered by their protégés over the years that they have lost some of their initial mystique. While Eno's ethereal, multilayered voice still imbues the songs with a kind of floating soul, it now seems limited compared with, say, David Byrne's.
Yet beneath the studied, soothing ambience lies a clearheaded cleverness that gives the songs ballast. Backed by a few drumbeats and synthesizer fills, Cale's calm vocal delivery gives the simple story in "Cordoba" a chilly pathos. On "Empty Frame," Cale and Eno become warped, profound Beach Boys: Above a pulsating swell, Eno coos, "We push the empty frame of reason out the cabin door/No, we won't be needing reason anymore." And "Crime in the Desert" cheerfully recounts the travails of a desperado over a kitschy rock & roll piano.
Eno and Cale don't seek lyrical analysis; they're out to forge a spooky, catchy aural environment and they're still masters. And when Eno closes Wrong Way Up with the sweet solo lullaby "The River," it becomes evident that, against the backdrop of today's increasingly programmed music, the icy Sultan of Synth now sounds refreshingly quaint and surprisingly human.
(Posted: Nov 15, 1990)
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- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2008 All Media Guide, LLC.