The debut effort by multi-instrumentalist
Ben Watt and vocalist and songwriter
Tracey Thorn took the
alterna-pop world by surprise in 1985. And rightfully so.
Watt's lush
chamber orchestra jazzscapes, full of Brazilian
bossa nova structures and airy horn charts, combined with
Thorn's throaty alto singing her generation's version of the
torch song, was a sure attraction for fans of sophisticated
pop and
vocal jazz. Featuring 12 tracks, the album has deeply influenced popular song structures since that time; this is evidenced in the work of more
R&B-oriented acts such as
Swing Out Sister and
Tuck and Patti. The set opens with
"Each and Everyone," a slow
samba-flavored
pop song. The song comes from the broken side of love, with
Thorn entreating from the heart: "You try to show me heaven but then close the door...Being kind is just a way to keep me under your thumb/And I can cry because that's something we've always done." A trumpet fills her lines and makes them glide above
Watt's
Latin mix. Elsewhere, the
folk bossa of
"Fascination" is all the architecture
Thorn needs to sink deep into her protagonist's brokenness. Guitars chime and stagger one another, slipping and sliding just above the bassline, and vanish into thin air. On
"I Must Confess," a riff similar to
"The Girl From Ipanema" locates
Thorn next to a deep ringing upright bass and
Watt's glissando guitar, played
Charlie Byrd-style, before
Nigel Nash punctures
Thorn's vocal with a velvety tenor solo. Once again, the notion of loss, memory, and the resolve of the left half of a relationship to go on, carrying regret but not remorse, is absolutely breathtaking.
Thorn continually meditated on broken relationships here, and that extended tome, which echoes through every song on the record, seems to have resonated with everyone who heard it. The set closes with
Watt's vocal on
"Soft Touch," a folksy
pop song, illustrated with guitars, a fretless bass, and piano, that sounds like something from
Supertramp in their better moments -- and no, that's not a bad thing. His voice -- while not nearly as dramatic as
Thorn's -- is wonderfully expressive, and his lyrics extend the feeling of
Eden to its final whisper. This set proved itself to be an auspicious debut that testified to the beginning of a long and creatively rewarding partnership that has endured. ~ Thom Jurek