Thursday, August 22, 2013

Wonderful Life



Initially emerging from the fertile Liverpool post-punk scene of the early 1980s, Colin Vearncombe, a.k.a. the plainly monikered Black, eventually established himself as a crooner of tasteful adult-contemporary pop, a bit like Bryan Ferry, but without the louche lounge-lizard associations. The most obvious characteristic of Black's low key artistry is his distinctive, smoky baritone, which is put to great effect on his patented sophisticated jazz-pop lamentations. Black songs might have their musical structures inspired by the more accessible moments of Sade and other sophisti-pop purveyors, but they are sugar-coated bullets that mask quietly desperate, unerringly anxious lyrics about wobbly relationships, chronic depression, and that old faithful, unrequited love. Check out the arty video clip for one of Black's most well-known standards, the casually cinematic, immensely stylish 'Wonderful Life' (which could soundtrack an obscure 1960s French new-wave art film).

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