Other formats

    Adobe Portable Document Format file (facsimile images)   TEI XML file   ePub eBook file  

Connect

    mail icontwitter iconBlogspot iconrss icon

Salient. Official Newspaper of the Victoria University Students' Association. Vol 44 No. 5. March 30 1981

That's Entertainment

That's Entertainment

record

From the simplest of song-structures, a floating, wistful acoustic backing, Paul Weller and his cohorts have created something of ethereal beauty. The amount of overlaid embellishment retains and enhances this simplicity: dreamy backing vocals that echo A Day In the Life and, towards the song's end, an electric guitar striving in vain to slip through the acoustic wall.

Other than that, it is the Jam doing what the Jam (currently) do better than anyone else - Weller's plaintive voice wrapped around some ugly images, Foxton and Buckler carrying the rhythms perfectly through the song's peaks and lulls.

An immaculately rendered song, and a single of only slightly lesser dimensions. But a massive cop-out. Pulling singles off albums is the oldest sales trick imaginable, but when it's of such a sure-sales-fire (sic!!) nature as is so painfully obvious here, it reeks of contempt.

The previous Jam LP Setting Sons only had Eton Rifles annexed from it (actually, put on it). They could then have followed this up with something else off the LP like Wasteland, but instead went back into the studio and unleashed the flawless Going Underground. A risk but it paid off (literally).

That's Entertainment parallels Wasteland in -both track listing and stature, making its 45 appearance a big disappointment and an unnecessary irony.