The Lexicon of Love – ABC
“Poison Arrow” is perhaps more of a significant song to me than I would first admit. I remember singing along to it playing pool with my mate. I think I was getting closer to liking music as the early 80s went on: I was aware of Spandau Ballet’s “Gold”, Duran Duran’s “A View to a Kill” as well as the music that I would grow to love such as Survivor’s “Eye of the Tiger” and Van Halen’s “Jump”. Not enough to buy any music, you understand, but the seeds of musical hunger were obviously there.
"Show Me” is a lively opening showcasing Martin Fry’s vocal talents as well as the 80s production and some very good bass. As noted, I remember “Poison Arrow” from the time and it still remains a catchy little number.
By the time “Many Happy Returns” has been playing for a minute or so, you start to get the nagging impression that you are hearing the same song for the third time with little tweaks here and there to convince the listener that they are hearing a different song. Not only that, you could probably call Tony Hadley or Simon Le Bon off the subs bench and things with still run like a smooth machine.
I can see why several people on the thread, including
@BimboBob, hold this album in high esteem. The negatives can easily be glossed over by a forgiving teenage audience and as the years pass by, because the album holds a special place in the listener’s heart, the faults even become part of the nostalgic magic – we are all guilty of this even though there is nothing to be guilty about. Music reminds us of those happy and sad times, and we’ll always carry it with us, good or bad.
Now to that “exciting” comment I mentioned earlier in the thread – or should I say, “excitable”. There’s no doubt that the productions is, arrrr, busy. You can just imagine Trevor Horn running around the studio whipping everybody into an excitable frenzy. When the backing singers and saxophonist are looking for a breather after a breathless opening treble, somehow he gets them even more frenzied for “Tears Are Not Enough” – surely he has fitted Martin Fry in some tight Y-fronts to get him to sound like this? By the time “Valentine’s Day” rolls around, the production has got out of control. It’s all very slick but just a bit too much, crimes repeated later on “Date Stamp” and “4 Ever 2 Gether”.
“The Look of Love, Pt1” is a great song and the best of the bunch is “All of My Heart” – an absolute perfect pop song with brilliant vocals and sweeping string backing. After this highpoint, it’s all downhill to the end of the album.
For the reasons I outlined at the start of this review, I enjoyed listening to this album for the first time because in a way, it forms a bridge between the point in time where I couldn’t care less about music (other than those TV sports theme tunes and film scores!) and the time where my ears started to prick up to the possibilities of music.
Several times on these threads, I’ve mentioned my cherished time listening to Radio One’s
Stereo Sequence on a Saturday afternoon in the mid-80s, and ABC’s “When Smokey Sings” was a regular feature for a while, a song I’ve always loved. I enjoyed listening to Martin Fry’s vocal throughout and for all its faults, excess gloss and dips in quality (who shouted “filler!”?), there’s no denying the timeless catchiness of “Poison Arrow”, “The Look of Love” and “All of My Heart”. Most bands would be happy to have just one hit record that has stood the test of time like any of these three, and yet ABC did it three times on one album. It’s more than worth
7/10.