This one's been quite often hailed as the 'Great Lost blah blah blah',
but it certainly depends on what exact sense you include in the expression.
Me, I suppose that to a certain extent it is great, not to mention lost
(and found), but I can't help comparing these outtakes to the four studio
regulars and the subsequent recordings of many of them on some of Lou
Reed's solo albums, and a slightly noticeable 'eeh' escapes my lips. Now
and then...
See, when these outtakes, most of them destined for the Underground's
fifth regular album that never happened due to Lou's and the band's record
company's obstinacy, were discovered by the record company in the early
Eighties, the world was already hungry for more fresh Velvets' recordings,
and the critics and the public fell upon them and extracted them and praised
them with the highest praise. How could they do otherwise? By then, everybody
with a more or less significant status in rock music had already proclaimed
themselves descended directly - if not from Lou Reed's guitar, then from
John Cale's viola. The album and its successor, Another View, were bound
to be deified. But never worry - here I go to save the world and debunk
the myth!
A clear example of how much this album is overrated is how all the critics
who used to praise Lou Reed's solo albums suddenly turn their backs on
him and say that all of these outtakes are superior to the later versions
on Lou's solo albums. Dude, if that's how it really is, either I don't
deserve to live or everybody else has got cotton wads in their ears. More
probably, nobody has ever really compared the two groups of songs. To
my notion, at least five of the ten songs on here have later been included
by Lou on his solo projects: 'I Can't Stand It', 'Ocean', and 'Lisa Says'
ended up on his debut album (Lou Reed), 'Andy's Chest', as everybody knows,
got re-recorded for Transformer, and 'She's My Best Friend' turned out
to be put on Coney Island Baby - six years after the 'rough mix' of VU.
And, all right, so 'Ocean' kinda sucks: but it sucks on both versions,
and at least the one on Lou Reed has enough 'static power' to make it
seem impressive.
But 'I Can't Stand It'? It begins its life on VU as a catchy, solid, but
very crude demo (and what's with that drum sound? I bet you anything it
was re-recorded in the Eighties - it sounds electronically enhanced!),
only to be tightened up and hardened up on Lou Reed to make a truly unforgettable
experience. 'Lisa Says'? Great song, but who on earth would prefer the
hoarse, out of tune screams 'Lisa sa-a-a-a-a-ys' on the VU version to
the moody, gentle, so unbelievably charming 'Lisa says... oh noooo...
Lisa says' of Lou Reed. (It's the 'oh no' part I miss so much, understand
that). Same thing goes for 'Andy's Chest' and 'She's My Best Friend'.
The overall problem with all these versions is understandable: They Are
Not Moody. That's very important. On Lou's solo records, all of these
songs took over an independent, breathing life of their own - small autonomous
worlds in their own rights. Here, it's just a bunch of solid, guitar-driven
demo versions with interesting, but not ideal melodies. I'll admit that
'She's My Best Friend' may be a bit more catchy and bouncy than on the
slow, dreary version on Coney Island Baby, but it's also more generic
(Mark Prindle said it reminded him of the Association, and I couldn't
agree more).
But don't get me wrong. This is still quite a good little record. Quite
simply, there ain't a single truly bad song here - and so, if you're afraid
of the Velvets' weirdness, this will be the natural thing to buy after
the self-titled record and Loaded. All of the above-mentioned songs, with
the possible exception of 'Ocean' and 'She's My Best Friend', are still
first-rate material, and that's not all.
Only two of the tracks here date to the Cale era, but it shows: 'Stephanie
Says' is a gorgeous ballad that reminds me a little of 'Sunday Morning'
because the melodies are similar (yet it's not a rip-off) and there's
a glockenspiel part on both, but it's also highlighted by some moving,
strangely inobtrusive violin playing by John, and it's a great highlight
of the band's 'softest' side. And 'Temptation Inside Your Heart' has Lou
and Sterling Morrison exchange some bizarre dialogue lines in between
the lines of the song (which is a rather generic rocker by itself), such
as 'Motown! You don't look like Martha and the Vandellas' and 'Lock the
door this time', which roll on at great speed and great fun.
As for the Doug era, there's some more angry rock'n'roll (the never ending,
but quite infuriating 'Foggy Notion'), some more routine, but pleasant
pop ('One Of These Days'), and even a Moe Tucker-sung album conclusion
- a great three-chord piano ballad called 'I'm Sticking With You' that
she sings in the same childish, naive, charming little 'voicelet' of hers.
In other words, the record's pretty diverse, and hardcore fans will definitely
get a blast out of it. I do like it - get this, I do like it - but I do
have the complaint I just voiced. The album's not finished, and that is
a bad thing: turns out that the Velvets did depend on the arrangements
and production after all, no matter how people like to emphasize the rawness
and 'purity' of their sound. Get this record at all costs, but I wouldn't
really advise you to do that until you've assimilated the first two Lou
Reed solo albums - at least, that way you won't be accused of giving in
to all the hype. (from George
Starostin's Reviews)
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