Splitsville's fourth album is a complete departure from anything the  band had previously done. Originally recorded as a four-song EP to be  given away as a sort of party favor at the first International Pop  Overthrow festival in Los Angeles, the much-expanded The Complete Pet  Soul is, as the title implies, a dual tribute to both Pet Sounds and  Rubber Soul. On the original EP, the Pet Sounds influence came through  more strongly, thanks to the heavily orchestrated feel, but on this  full-length version, the orchestral tracks are nicely balanced with  several new songs that recall the low-voltage, almost folk-rock sound  that predominated on the original U.S. edition of Rubber Soul. Still,  the Pet Sounds pastiche tracks are the real standouts simply for being  done with such obvious affection and good humor, especially the swooning  "Caroline Knows" and the almost Smile-like multi-part mini-operetta  "The Love Songs of B. Douglas Wilson," which is the album's high point.  Musically, it should have been the album's closing track, but instead, a  cover of Burt Bacharach and Hal David's "I'll Never Fall in Love Again"  recorded for the soundtrack of the cheerleading film Bring It On is  tacked on at the end. It doesn't quite match the mood of the rest of the  album, and it's certainly not a patch on Dionne Warwick's version, so  it's an odd, equivocal ending to an otherwise superb album.-AMG
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There you go, raiding my CD collection again! I love this one, and, indeed, all of Splitsville's discs. Also recommended is the Greenberry Woods, some of whose members would later form Splitsville.
ReplyDeleteI posted Big Money Item up a while back, both band were absolutely brilliant, they should have been so much bigger!
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