| Escape Artist is veteran Garland Jeffries sounding very Elvis Costello, 
        with clean Bob Clearmountain production and guest stars like David Johansen, 
        Nona Hendryx, Lou Reed, Adrian Belew, Randy & Michael Brecker, and 
        many others. It is a very satisfying pop disc. Jonathan Richman has his 
        band Modern Lovers, Willie Alexander wrote a song with the same name, 
        and David Bowie wrote "Modern Love"; Jeffries "Modern Lovers" 
        has nothing to do with any of them except that he comes from the same 
        underground scene as all of the above. A good idea is a good idea, and 
        this is another good song with that title. "Christine" also 
        works. It's a fun pop romp helping make this one of Jeffries' most cohesive 
        discs. "Ghost of a Chance" is a clever tune about a relationship 
        with no hope; there is a solid, harder version of Rudy Martinez' "96 
        Tears" with some very cool guitar making it the most radio-friendly 
        track. Garland Jeffries vocals are in great shape, in control, and almost 
        menacing. The back cover has him reading a New York Post with former president 
        Jimmy Carter declaring an emergency, with very movie film like photos/poses 
        by the artist. "Innocent" takes the album other places, going 
        into a Romeo Void or Cars '80s place. It's very catchy, very new wave 
        meets techno. "When it comes to sex/you're using your special effects/...we're 
        gonna ruin all the records in the fingerprint file." Classic Garland 
        Jeffries lyrics. "True Confessions" continues the techno groove 
        -- "You keep rolling in my head/like a magnum that repeats." 
        "R.O.C.K." shows John Cougar how it is really done, this Garland 
        Jeffries original is authoritative. "Graveyard Rock" is reggae 
        for the unlucky. "Mystery Kids" brings up memories of The New 
        York Dolls with a great hook and a celebration of underground rock by 
        someone who emerged from that environment -- it's inspiring. "Mystery 
        Kids" is one of the best tracks on a very good record. Represented 
        by Fred Heller who managed Mott the Hoople as well, Jeffries had a near-hit 
        single on Atlantic called "Wild in the Streets." It became a 
        concert anthem for the reconstituted Mott when they became the British 
        Lions. This album has that same street-smart attitude as Jeffries' most 
        celebrated song, and the musicianship is top notch, creating one of this 
        artist's most important catalog pieces.  (by Joe Viglione, All 
        Music Guide) |