Known mostly for his session work, guitarist
Chris Spedding's
Enemy Within release contains enough fragments of mild rockabilly, pop, and traditional rock & roll to keep it afloat. Sounding an awful lot like
Mark Knopfler,
Spedding fails to unleash any real surprises, as songs like "Signs of Love," "Enemy Within," and "Hi-Heel Shoes" are straight-ahead little rock & rollers with an abundance of catchy licks and recognizable rhythms. Many of the songs employ an echo effect on
Spedding's voice, which does become a bit trite, but his playing more than makes up for it, and his guitar does become the main focus throughout the 12 cuts. Once in a while,
Carter Cathcart's keyboards join
Spedding's indulgent riffs to create a wee bit of differentiation and a lean toward an '80s sound, while drummer
Anton Fig is consistent as always behind the kit. Even his renditions of "Shakin' All Over" and
Ronnie Hawkins' "Mary Lou," in which
Spedding openly struts his talent, are admissible, and the dreary "Go West" is really the only cut that sounds out of place. There's nothing on
Enemy Within that matches the amiability of his biggest hit, "Motorbikin," and he isn't as colorful as he was on
Roy Harper's
HQ album, but nearly every track displays relevant amounts of
Spedding's own guitar "oomph" in one way or another. ~ Mike DeGagne