Sparkle in the Rain – Simple Minds
I’m familiar with one full Simple Minds album and about 3 or 4 other singles – none from
Sparkle in the Rain.
My overriding feeling with this album is how mushy the production is. Whilst there are a few bits and pieces to like here and there, any potential for greatness, even not-that-badness, is swallowed up by the sounds of great big synths and slabs of keyboards. “Book of Brilliant Things” is a typical example of this overload but it’s not on its own.
“Waterfront” comes over all bombastic – that’s the word I’ve been searching for to describe most of this album – but for some reason I enjoyed this more than the tracks around it. Maybe it’s the tease that it was going to sound like The Doors’ “Roadhouse Blues” at the start, or the fact that it settles into a less bombastic sound for more than half its running time.
“C Moon Cry Like A Baby” is not bad either as it has a slightly less plasticky and more soulful feel.
“The Kick Inside of Me” injects some much-needed guitar, almost like Charlie Burchill has spent the album up to this point trying to find his six-string which has been buried beneath a pile of keyboards on the studio floor.
Sparkle in the Rain does have an upbeat, dancing in a dark club at midnight vibe to it, which is I’m sure why
@FogBlueInSanFran likes it. Also, as he’s plainly stated, it reminds him of a certain time in his life, which we can all relate to. But I’m surprised any self-respecting music fan sporting an orange Mohican would find much to love here.
On the whole, it’s music that I just can’t connect with. There’s not enough space between the notes, with every potential space filled with some shiny new (for the time) toy keyboard sound. I notice that those who like this album don’t like what came later, but I’d pick “Belfast Child” as my favourite Simple Minds song – a wonderfully evocative piece that builds slowly with lots of great instrumental parts, not least the wonderful Lisa Germano on fiddle. And yes, it’s not lost on me that this is the old head versus moving feet thing.
As noted by others, Jim Kerr gives it all with the vocals and I can respect a band that’s playing their thing, but this reminds me of all the stuff that my fellow classmates were falling over themselves to like in the 80s, and I was left wondering what all the fuss what about.
5/10.