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John Cale - Paris 1919

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Much has, of course, been written about John Cale’s 1973 masterpiece, not least around its many and complex themes (political, artistic, literary, personal, etc), but nothing should be allowed to detract from (or blur) the fact that with Paris 1919 Wales’ finest penned an idiosyncratically sublime set of songs, full of (often subtle) melody and highly poetic (though often obscure) lyrics. It’s also an album that almost defies genre classification – often described as 'baroque pop’ – with a whole range of apparent influences, through 60s bands such as The Beatles, Beach Boys and Kinks, plus the obvious feed from The Velvets’ more ethereal moments, but also (for me, at least) shades of Neil Young (the heavenly The Endless Plain of Fortune could have appeared on After The Goldrush) and, more recently, even Nick Cave and (in terms of the lyrical sophistication and source referencing) Luke Haines.

And what a curious band line-up Cale assembled. Little Feat’s Lowell George and Ritchie Hayward on guitar and drums respectively – a nice fit for the album’s relatively laid-back feel, take George’s slide guitar backing during the start of the Dylan Thomas-esque personal tale in Child’s Christmas In Wales – but, perhaps most surprisingly The Crusaders’ 'jazz-funk’ man Wilton Felder on bass. Nonetheless, the album’s sound is seamless, from the jaunty 'la-la-la’ pop of the album’s title song (with its vibrant UCLA Symphony Orchestra string backing), through the rockier sound of Macbeth and the quirky Graham Greene, to the haunting effects of Half Past France or Hanky Panky Nohow – the latter, whose apparent light hearted flippancy disguises the song’s darker undercurrents ('Nothing frightens me more than religion at my door’) – providing a deceptive quality which permeates the album.

One of John Cale's very finest solo efforts, Paris 1919 is also among his most accessible records, one which grows in depth and resonance with each successive listen. A consciously literary work -- the songs even bear titles like "Child's Christmas in Wales," "Macbeth," and "Graham Greene" -- Paris 1919 is close in spirit to a collection of short stories; the songs are richly poetic, enigmatic period pieces strongly evocative of their time and place. Chris Thomas' production is appropriately lush and sweeping, with many tracks set to orchestral accompaniment; indeed, there's little here to suggest either Cale's noisy, abrasive past or the chaos about to resurface in his subsequent work -- for better or worse, his music never achieved a similar beauty again.

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Child's Christmas in Wales
Hanky Panky Nohow
The Endless Plain of Fortune
Andalucia
Macbeth
Paris 1919
Graham Greene
Half Past France
Antarctica Starts Here

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