"Humiliated by Polydor's rejection of the final Style Council album
(it remained unreleased until the 1998 box set), Paul Weller retreated
from the spotlight, licked his wounds, and redefined his music. He re-emerged
with the Paul Weller Movement and the surging trad rock single "Into
Tomorrow," a song that may not have been a big hit, but it signaled
that he had begun a productive new phase. That same criticism applies
to his 1992 solo debut (by this point, he had dropped "Movement,"
and decided to just be "Weller"). Heavily inspired by soul and
classic rock (more early Humble Pie than Led Zeppelin, of course), it's
a solid effort whose best songs the opening triptych "Uh Huh
Oh Yeh," "I Didn't Mean to Hurt You," and "Bull-Rush,"
plus "Into Tomorrow" demonstrate the virtues of nostalgia,
particularly when it's tempered with fine songwriting. If he drifts a
bit toward the end, and winds up with some lightweight songs, it's still
gritty and effective, displaying a focus absent in the Style Council's
last few albums. It's not a full-fledged comeback (that would arrive next),
but it's a fine start all the same."
(Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All
Music Guide)
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