In the mid-'70s, British singer/songwriters like
Graham Parker and
Elvis Costello launched careers with music that tempered the onslaught of punk to a more melodic rock sound reminiscent of mid-'60s
Beatles music and its many followers, and, while retaining punk's lyrical anguish, explored more complex emotions with more eloquent words. On his debut album,
Mike Viola, whose voice most people heard for the first time singing "That Thing You Do!" in the movie of the same name, resurrects the sound of
Parker & the Rumour's Howlin' Wind and Costello & the Attractions'
This Year's Model, fronting the rhythm section known as
the Candy Butchers, with occasional added keyboards by
the Band's
Garth Hudson.
Viola's rough voice has much of
Parker's urgency to it, and his songs, less substantial than those of
Costello, are nevertheless concerned with many of the same elements of romantic disappointment and its attendant frustration. Indeed, he seems to be rewriting the same song over and over: "All day I'm thinking about you, " he sings in "Give Me Some Time," and "You are always on my mind" in "Can't We Do Anything Right," a title followed one song later by "Doing It the Wrong Way." One song is called "Falling into Place," another "Falling Back Down."
Viola's music for these confused and ambivalent sentiments is raucously played by
the Candy Butchers, and occasional horn and string charts add grace without robbing the tunes of bite. Mixer Bob Clearmountain has given the album an explosive sound in which every instrument seems simultaneously very loud and distinct. Chip-on-the-shoulder sensitivity is a good combination of feelings in the ever-adolescent world of rock & roll, and it works as well for
Viola on this debut album as it has for others in the past. The next question is whether, like
Elvis Costello, he'll evolve out of it or, like
Graham Parker, keep repeating it. ~ William Ruhlmann