Album Reviews
Some of the songs are undeniable winners "Art Lover," "Come Dancing," "Apeman," "Living on a Thin Line" and the unjustly overlooked "Lost and Found" and hearing them in these crackling live versions is like running into old friends. Less welcome are "Give the People What They Want," "Think Visual" and "Around the Dial," which are energetic but still pedestrian by Ray Davies's standards.
Live: The Road wisely emphasizes recent material and contains two brandnew songs: "It," which suggests a possible return to the Kinks' mid-Seventies theatrics, and "The Road," a studio track that is the latest of Davies's periodic state-of-the-band messages. His conclusion ("There's gas in my tank and I've still got a way to go") is, unsurprisingly, one of upbeat resignation. It's fun to pick out the Kinks references in the song, but one yearns for Davies's understated, slightly detached irony ("I never thought I'd travel so far to work," he observed wryly in an earlier road report, 1972's "Motorway"). But Davies clearly still has much to offer, and judging from this album, so may the Kinks.
(Posted: Feb 25, 1988)
Your Turn
Advertisement
More CD Reviews
-
The Academy Is. . .
Fast Times At Barrington High -
Various Artists
Everything that Happens Will Happen Today -
Ra Ra Riot
The Rhumb Line -
The Dandy Warhols
Earth To The Dandy Warhols -
Death Vessel
Nothing is Precious Enough For Us -
Ice Cube
Raw Footage -
Staind
The Illusion Of Progress -
Elton John
Tumbleweed Connection -
Jonas Brothers
A Little Bit Longer -
Loudon Wainwright III
Recovery
View
Email
AIM
Del.icio.us
DiggThis
Fark It!



- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2008 All Media Guide, LLC.