Sunday 3 August 2014

World Party Goodbye Jumbo As Recommended By Friend Of Rachel Worth


World Party Goodbye Jumbo

Get It At Discogs
Karl Wallinger really hit his stride on Goodbye Jumbo, which has the same overly obvious influences as Private Revolution but which features more steady and substantial songs. Indeed, it’s easy to marvel at the consistent quality of the songwriting and the excellent execution of the performances, with pretty synthesizers and a wonderfully melodic guitar tone leading the way along with Wallinger’s plaintive croon. This is a thoroughly enjoyable, beautifully crafted pop album that’s aided by a clean production sound that perfectly fits the bright, buoyant material. Lyrically, Wallinger again focuses on the environment and other topics that are important to him, particularly religion and relationships, and impressively rich, mellow grooves carry the often-evocative album forward musically. Perhaps I could live without the sparse, funky “Is It Too Late?” (a poor choice for an album opener), and I’m also not a fan of the discofied “Show Me To The Top,” but otherwise I’d be hard pressed not to tout any of the other tracks. THE CLASSIC groover “Way Down Now” (which liberally borrows from the Rolling Stones’ “Sympathy For The Devil”) and the emininently singable “Put The Message In The Box” were minor hits and both are outstanding, but the evocative “When The Rainbow Comes,” with its gorgeous slide guitar and lyrics lifted from the Marvelettes (how in the world did Wallinger escape plagiarism charges?), the uplifting “Take It Up,” and “Sweet Soul Dream,” a sweet soul ballad on which Sinead O’Connor again guests, are almost as good. Elsewhere, “Ain’t Gonna Come ‘Till I’m Ready” is sexually explicit yet still sexy, even if there isn’t much of a melody to it (it still works, mostly ‘cause of Wallinger’s falsetto), while “And I Fell Back Alone” and “God On My Side” are sparse, solemn ballads and “Love Street” is a beautifully breathy synth ballad. Last but not least, “Thank You World” provides an uplifting, sincere signoff from a then-popular but since-neglected gem of an album that at the very least ranks as a minor classic of its type, some liberal borrowings and a duff track or two aside. Karl Wallinger is a true pro, and this is a sparkling, expertly crafted pop album by a "band" who (then and especially now) deserve a much wider audience.

8 comments:

friend of rachel worth said...

great summing up

Anonymous said...

Message in a Box cut off early, did it just download badly or is the file damaged?

Aid00 said...

Hello Anonymous Sorry About That,I've Done A Re-rip & Here's New Link

http://www99.zippyshare.com/v/U6kUmsCn/file.html

Bob M said...

Thank you!
I had passed this album over many times in the stores, but seeing it on here and reading about it made me want to give it a listen. Man, it's really good! Thanks for putting it up!

Kev said...

Hi Aid.Can you re-up this one please? Thanks Kev

Aid00 said...

Hello Kev New Link Up & Running

Kev said...

Thank you Aid. YNWA!

Anonymous said...

Cheers!! RIP Karl

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