The first of 4AD owner Ivo Watts-Russell's multi-artist studio sessions
under the This Mortal Coil name, 1984's It'll End in Tears was a surprisingly
influential album in many circles, key in the reawakening of interest
in artists like Alex Chilton and the late Tim Buckley by a younger generation
of listeners. (Two songs from Big Star's Third are included, a version
of "Kangaroo" featuring Cindytalk vocalist Gordon Sharp that
sounds even druggier and more disorienting than the original, and a chilling
piano and strings version of "Holocaust" with haunted vocals
by Howard Devoto; the simple but ravishing version of Buckley's "Song
to the Siren" by Cocteau Twins Liz Fraser and Robin Guthrie was cited
by David Lynch as the direct inspiration for Julee Cruise's first two
albums and has since been used several times in commercials and films.)
The covers are the most memorable part of the album -- a Robbie Grey-sung
version of Colin Newman's "Not Me," cleverly incorporating a
hypnotic riff from another Newman song, "B," is the most conventionally
hooky song on the album, to the point that folks who haven't listened
to the album for a while tend to forget that half of the songs are "band"
originals. These six songs mark 4AD's definitive break from its origins
as an artsy post-punk imprint (Bauhaus, Modern English's first few records,
etc.) to the development of "the 4AD sound," a heavily reverbed
wash of treated guitars and atmospheric keyboards with vocals treated
as another instrument in an amorphous wash of sound. The problem is that
these largely instrumental tracks sound more like half-baked studio doodles
than fully formed songs; a three-song stretch on side two featuring Dead
Can Dance's Lisa Gerrard is particularly tiresome. As a whole, It'll End
in Tears is a lovely, often exquisite record; taken individually, the
power of some of the songs is lost.
(by Stewart Mason, AMG)
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