| The relationship between Harry Nilsson and John Lennon is legendary. 
        They were notorious booze hounds and carousers, getting kicked out of 
        clubs for misbehavior and generally terrorizing L.A. during Lennon's "lost 
        weekend" of 1974. They wanted to make an album together  hell, 
        anyone working at such a peak would  and the result was Pussy Cats, 
        a Nilsson album produced by Lennon. Almost immediately, Nilsson got sick, 
        resulting in a ruptured vocal cord. Not wanting Lennon to stop the sessions, 
        Nilsson never told his friend, stubbornly working his way through the 
        sessions until he lost his voice entirely. These are the sessions that 
        make up Pussy Cats, an utterly bewildering record that's more baffling 
        than entertaining. Like many superstar projects of its time, this is studded 
        with contributions from friends and studio musicians, all intent on having 
        a good time in the studio  which usually means hammering out rock 
        & roll oldies. In this case, it meant both Dylan's "Subterranean 
        Homesick Blues" and the children's song "Loop de Loop," 
        which gives a good idea where Nilsson was at. Through its messiness, Pussy 
        Cats winds up showing how he and Lennon violently careened between hedonism 
        and self-loathing. Of the new songs, the inadvertently revealing "All 
        My Life" is the strongest, followed by the sweet "Don't Forget 
        Me," yet this is more about tone than substance. It's about hearing 
        Nilsson's voice getting progressively harsher, as the backing remains 
        appealingly professional and slick. It doesn't quite jibe, and it's certainly 
        incoherent, but that's its charm. It may not be as wild as the lost weekend 
        itself, but it couldn't have been recorded at any other time and remains 
        a fascinating aural snapshot of the early days of 1974. 
       (by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All 
        Music Guide) |