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PETER LACEY ~ PERMANENT WAVE
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This excellent new CD was
recorded during the summer of 2006 in the multi-talented Mr.
Lacey's presumably fairly capacious loft, and the contents are,
as usual, subtly memorable.
Peter's previous albums have revealed a capacity to create
intelligently crafted pop music
that's sadly all too rare these days, and this beguiling
character excels himself here with
stand-out tracks such as 'Miss Tere', 'Book of Days' and 'Many
Moons Ago'.
Reviewed by Kevin Bryan, UK
When Peter Lacey released his first album, his music was most
often compared to that of
Brian Wilson - mainly because it was mainly piano driven and had
layers of superb harmony.
However, with each passing release he sets the bar higher and
higher, often leaving the listener
wondering if he can surpass his last effort. With Permanent
Wave, Lacey's 5th album, he has
truly come into his own - creating what is possibly his best work
so far. Lacey's vocals come
across with more confidence, and his melodies are the strongest
he's yet written. One of the
best things about Peter Lacey's music (besides the great
melodies) is his innate talent for
picking just the right arrangement for his songs. So you never
have to wonder how it would
sound with more/less instrumentation or harmony, etc. It just
sounds "right".
While this album is
"classic Peter Lacey" in sound and is instantly
recognizable as his style,
there is a surprisingly heavy dose of drums and (electric)
guitar. So, ultimately you get almost
a "progressive" Peter Lacey album, with a surprising
amount of almost heavy rock songs, along
with a great mix of ballads, thought-inspiring instrumentals, and
some of the catchiest melodies
short of Lennon/McCartney/Wilson. And with 15 great songs to
chose from, I'll just pick a few
highlights. 'Miss Tere' is a quiet masterpiece, if it wasn't for
Peter's distinct voice, you would
swear it was a Paul McCartney song! (But it is definitely better
than any melody Paul McCartney
has written since 1989!). The most pop-sounding song is 'Surround
Sound', with its touches of
psychedelia with backwards guitars. 'Many Moons Ago' has got to
be my all-time favorite Peter
Lacey song and one of the most beautiful songs I've heard in
years. If there is one song on this
album that you have to hear, this is it! More proof of Lacey's
mastery of melody. If you want to
blow the mind of any jaded friends who claim that there is
nothing good in today's music - look
no further than Permanent Wave, it is the pinnacle of
Lacey's brilliance so far and will make a
true believer out of anyone.
Reviewed in Ear Candy by Ronnie Dannelley, USA
Awash In New Sounds
By John Lane
And so we start 2007 with
Peter Lacey's 5th offering, Permanent Wave a
subtle, sublime bang.
The title itself suggests Lacey's continual oceanic & rustic
preoccupations that have dominated his
previous albums. For those unfamiliar with Peter Lacey's body of
work, the sweet relief I offer to you
is the knowledge that you can step inside at any point of his
career and not be disappointed. The
thread of his craftsmanship is constant and dedicated
"permanent", if you will; acute attention to
the pop song as something indelible and worthy of repeated
experiences. It is fair to say that
Permanent Wave plays to Lacey's strengths: the ear for
melody and the requisite harmonies. If his
Songs From A Loft from 2005 was an inhalation of breath,
then Permanent Wave is the artist exhaling.
There's more fight, less
lilt to this one; Lacey revisits some comfort zones and
completely redecorates,
thankfully rearranging expectations. 'First Port Of Call' opens
the album with a gentle pomp-and-circum-
stance combo of acoustic guitar and brass sounds (it can be
done!). Instrumentally, Lacey's talent has
never been in doubt but it's nice to hear an album opener
that sounds, frankly, un-Lacey-esque. From
there follows 'Book Of Days' and again, let me put it pure
and simply: Peter Lacey has always had the
unerring knack for putting The Big Single on each one of his
albums, and damn if he hasn't done it again.
Smooth vocals are augmented
by some refined shredding and punchy percussion it's all
locked into
place perfectly, and I curse the deejay who doesn't have the
brains to put this on his/her new playlist. The
close contender, or maybe it's equal, is 'Surround Sound'
the build-up drone is pure rock. Just when
you think you know Peter Lacey, four albums in, he throws these
welcome curveballs. For the fans who
have been riding the Lacey Express since 2000's debut of Beam!,
then you can clearly see we're in the
same expansive, imaginative wonderland with songs like 'Caravel',
'The Land, The Sea, The Sky', and
'Many Moons Ago' addressing consistent thematic threads in
Lacey's oeuvre. One senses that he's a
sunnier Van Gogh, painting that surfy-pastoral landscape in his
mind and in view until it becomes
something he can make his own.
The closer 'Permanent Wave,
Farewell' is a cheeky enough title but it ranks as a favorite of
mine for
its playful, Steely-Dan-esque groove. At this album's close, this
listener feels like he's sat through a
rather epic project although it clocks in at 45 minutes.
'Permanent Wave, Farewell' is that exhaling
I mentioned previously when the credits roll and we leave feeling
uplifted. A sort of joyful melancholy
has permeated previous Lacey albums but this work feels like a
New Year's Resolution for which
I can't quite name (stubborn optimism?) suffice to say,
make it yours as well.
Reviewed at The Smile Shop by John Lane, UK
First Port Of Call' is a promising opening, an overture of
sorts, setting the scene perfectly for
that distinctive Lacey guitar sound. Many memorable moments
follow from the tightly structured
enchantingly familiar Book Of Days through the
charming Miss Tere (I was just thinking this would
have made a nice replacement for some of the rather uninspiring
stuff on Paul McCartneys Chaos
And Creation - its very much in the Macca style) to
the aptly named Sublime with The Beach Boys
layered harmonies and warm studio echo accompanied as always by
ex Jade Warrior Jon Fielder on
keyboards. Still to come is the heavy psych rock of
Surround Sound. The bass and guitar treatments
are pure White Album Beatles and who else would use the
word "omnibus" in a song? Many Moons
Ago is again pure Macca, an acoustic feast of folk
inflected pop with a slightly nasal vocal delivery
(evident at places throughout the album) he has made his own - a
haunting commodity! Caravel is
a much needed "orchestral" instrumental interlude with
a cowbell led "break", guitar in one speaker,
synth in the other. Lacey is also a bit of a wordsmith as
youll hear on the lengthy pilgrims progress
tale Peter The Chanter. Lines And
Squares has a Latin Steely Dan feel while The Land,
The
Sea, The Sky has a very 60s Bacharach vibe with some nice
brass courtesy of John Williams.
(The instrumental backing is completed here and there by Ralph
Willey on drums). The Common
Place has a touch of the Stevie Wonders, an effect even
more evident on Hey Rose. Ive cited
a lot of classy influences because Peter Lacey is a class act who
soaks up influences to take
the listener on a lush and lavish musical journey that never
ceases to amaze.
Reviewed in Zeitgeist by Phil Jackson, UK
I didnt get around to reviewing this in time for my Festive
30 of 2006 but include it as my first album
of the month for 2007. I would also like to take this opportunity
to wish that "small but perfectly formed"
record label Pink Hedgehog all the best for 2007 following the
favourable review of Anton Barbeaus
Drug Free in The Times. Its also pleasing to note
favourable reviews of Peter Laceys work in Uncut
and Record Collector magazines. Anyone who is unfamiliar with
Pink Hedgehog Records should go
to www.pinkhedgehog.com and acquaint themselves with label head
Simon Felton immediately!
Macca, The Beatles, The
Beach Boys, Steely Dan, Stevie Wonder, Burt Bacharach - Ive
cited a
lot of classy influences in my review for Zeitgeist because Peter
Lacey is a class act who soaks
up influences to take the listener on a lush and lavish musical
journey that never ceases to amaze.
iPod/ MP3 choices: 'Surround Sound' (Is this an outtake from The
White Album ?), 'Peter The
Chanter' (Try to work out what its all about!), 'Caravel'
(Its great to hear an instrumental break -
Peters music needs more of these to make it even more
perfect!)
Reviewed at Paradox One by Phil Jackson, UK
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