While Lyle Lovett's
self-titled debut album made it clear he was one the most gifted and
idiosyncratic talents to emerge in country music in the 1980s, his
follow-up, 1987's Pontiac,
took the strengths of his first disc and refined them, and the result
was a set whose sound and feel more accurately reflected Lovett's musical personality. While much of Pontiac favors the country side of Lovett's
musical personality, the bouncy swing of "Give Back My Heart" and the
weepy stroll of "Walk Through the Bottomland" have a lighter touch that
suits them noticeably better than the stiffer production and
arrangements of the first album, while the breezy snap of "L.A. County"
serves as a perfect contrast to the tune's violent dénouement. The
second half of the album gives Lovett
a chance to indulge his fondness for jazz and blues flavors on the
cynical "She's No Lady," "M-O-N-E-Y," and "She's Hot to Go," and if Lovett
would follow this path with great musical success on his next few
albums, he was already traveling in the right direction and the songs
and the arrangements are aces. And it's all but impossible to imagine
anyone being given a big push by a major label in Nashville who could
get away with the fanciful whimsy of "If I Had a Boat" and the stark and
unsettling character sketch of "Pontiac" on the same album. If Lyle Lovett left any doubts at all about this man's gifts as a performer and songwriter, Pontiac
proved that he had even more tricks up his sleeve than he'd let on
first time out, and it's the first of several masterpieces in Lovett's career.
aCá
Saturday, August 09, 2014
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