Album Reviews
Blunt, in particular, deserves a steady star gig. Not only is he an ace instrumentalist in the metal tradition (check out the schizo guitar lashings on the raving "Mystery Title"), but he also cowrote, mostly with Plant, the album's eight tracks, and so presumably was responsible for such outré touches as the dense, ensemble lines toward the end of "Worse than Detroit." One hopes that the Plant-Blunt collaboration will bear further fruit, because it's a winner. "Burning down One Side," the leadoff track, is a dead-on-target hita neck-wringing riff spiced with effortlessly atmospheric guitar leadswhile the charming "Fat Lip," a bluesy riff located at the other end of the emotional spectrum, could almost give laid-back a good name again.
Elsewhere, Plant trots out his trademark bellow for "Slow Dancer" and the aforementioned "Mystery Title," and enlists the high, reedy tones of saxophonist Raphael Ravenscroft (noted for his work on the Gerry Rafferty hit, "Baker Street") for the slightly unfocused "Pledge Pin." There are longueurs: "Moonlight in Samosa," for instance, is sort of like "Stairway to Heaven" without the sonic liftoff, and "Like I've Never Been Gone" ("I see the sunlight in your eyeeeeeeeeee ...") is just sort of stupid. But when the good stuff on an album cuts all the other cock-rock competition in sight, only a curmudgeon would complain.
(Posted: Aug 16, 1982)
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