In the two and a half years following the release
of Mainstream, Lloyd Cole signed to Capitol Records in the U.S., split
from the Commotions, and moved to New York. For his first solo album,
he assembled a team consisting of two New York band veterans drummer/co-producer
Fred Maher and guitarist Robert Quine, both of whom had played in Richard
Hell's Voidoids and Lou Reed's backup group plus bassist Matthew
Sweet and Commotions keyboard player Blair Cowan. As a result, Lloyd Cole
boasts a tougher, harder sound than the Commotions' records. Cole's vocals,
meanwhile, have become more direct and less stylized. Cole's lyrics are
also less adorned, and he has lightened up somewhat. Much of Lloyd Cole
is musically astringent in a way Cole hasn't managed previously, even
if the album is far less ambitious than his first two records.
(William Ruhlmann, All
Music Guide)
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