Producers
Clive Langer and
Alan Winstanley, as is their wont, created a shimmering pop surface for Lloyd Cole and the Commotions' second album,
Easy Pieces, sweetening the tracks with string and brass countermelodies and emphasizing the chiming highs of the guitar and keyboards for an attractive sound that echoed the earnestness of British bands like
the Hollies and
Herman's Hermits circa 1966. It was, of course, like sugarcoating cyanide capsules, given
Cole's pleasantly sung lyrics, which detailed philosophical disillusionment, romantic discord, and, yes, at least attempted suicide. In the U.K.,
Easy Pieces was a Top Ten hit. But although the album saw something of a proper release in the U.S., and the Commotions toured extensively, no American breakthrough materialized. ~ William Ruhlmann