Superbi
Studio Album by The Beautiful South released in 2006The Rose of My Cologne | |
Manchester | |
There Is Song | |
The Cat Loves the Mouse | |
The Next Verse | |
When Romance Is Dead | |
Meanwhile | |
Space | |
Bed of Nails | |
Never Lost a Chicken to a Fox | |
From Now On | |
Tears |
Superbi review
Lyrically Superbi is classic The Beautiful South
Superbi is the eleventh album from The Beautiful South. All of the trademark vocal stylings and wry lyrical musings are present, and it's pleasing to hear that the band's cunning knack for crafting irresistible melodies is still present. When The Housemartins split, it would have been hard to predict that one member would become a successful children's author (Stan Cullimore), another would become a world-famous DJ and dance artist (Norman Cook) and that two more would go on to form one of the most successful British groups of all time. Yet that's exactly what Paul Heaton and Dave Hemingway did with The Beautiful South. And although commercially the predecessors of Superbi have been a mixed bag, it's famously been said that one in every seven homes in the UK owns a copy of the greatest hits’ compilation Carry On Up The Charts. Heaton himself said he doesn't write songs for teenagers, but rather people who have lived together all their lives, and he's dished up another album of pop for grown-ups. Lyrically Superbi is classic Beautiful South with Heaton's sardonic worldview mulling over love, loss and all that happens in between.
Heaton has always been that most British of songwriters
The mood of the album throughout is mostly upbeat and feelgood, with the twangy banjo and steel guitar of The Rose Of My Cologne making for an excellent opener. Alison Wheeler may be the third female vocalist of The Beautiful South's career, but fits in well: her breathy tones spar delightfully with Heaton's, creating real-life duets that aren't at all slushy. Heaton has always been that most British of songwriters, and that tradition continues here, from the celebration of that famously rain sodden city of Manchester, or the vicious disillusionment on the duet of The Cat Loves The Mouse, those very English emotions of disappointment and melancholy are fully on display. Best of all is the pithily accurate ballad When Romance Is Dead. Heaton's tale of a couple growing apart will be recognized by more than a few people. It's an excellent song, superbly sung by both Wheeler and Hemingway. Other nice touches include the brass band on The Next Verse and the country jamboree feel of From Now On, just two examples of the revitalizing effect that producer Ian Stanley (former member of Tears For Fears and producer of Tori Amos' finest moment Little Earthquakes) has obviously had on the album. The lovely ballad Bed Of Nails is another example of Heaton at his finest, the gorgeous melody hiding some typically clever lyrics.
The album has a new country-ish direction
The release coincides with the 20th Anniversary of The Housemartins debut hit Happy Hour and shows that Paul Heaton and Dave Hemingway's partnership has not diminished over time. Recorded at Peter Gabriel's Real World studios, a farm in Bakewell, Superbi was mixed by the legendary Bill Price (Sex Pistols, Clash, Guns n' Roses). Superbi comes two years after the covers album Golddiggas, Headnodders and Pholk Songs and it appears that that project has given Heaton a chance to recharge his creative batteries. The album has a new country-ish direction, and although the famous Heaton template of acerbic lyrics wrapped in cuddly melodies remains, there does seem to be a new purpose here that was missing from releases such as Gaze and Painting It Red. Obviously, The Beautiful South are never going to be the most fashionable group in the world, and there's a good chance that Superbi will sell to their fanbase without making any big splashes in the chart. Yet Paul Heaton and company have never been particularly bothered about being hip, and Superbi is another example of this most resolutely British of bands quietly getting on with what they do best.