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Dave
Davies - Unfinished Business

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Unfinished
by:
mark feldman
This
two disc retrospective of the legendary Kinks' lead guitarist
and occasional songwriter - Dave's brother Ray was the primary
mouthpiece and composer of the band - is both fascinating
and maddening. Imagine, if you will, that we make first contact
with an alien species, and they are interested in the music
that humans listen to. They would like to hear some of the
Beatles as an introduction to the rock genre. So you gather
all of the best Beatle tunes written by George Harrison, put
them on a mix tape, and inform the alien delegation that you
have painstakingly compiled a perfect introduction to the
most influential band of the rock era.
Ridiculous,
no? But the first disc and the second half of the second disc
of Unfinished Business are the Kinks equivalent of
that. Equally curious is the almost haphazard song selection.
The collection falters by trying to be both a best-of-Dave
collection and a diehard fans' treat at once, while not really
including enough of either to be one or the other. On the
one hand we get "You Really Got Me," "Death of a Clown" and
"Living On a Thin Line," the only tracks that will be familiar
to any but the most ardent Kinkophiles. But also included
are unreleased Dave-penned Kink tunes like 1969's "Climb Your
Wall" and 1991's "I've Got Your Number." The era selection
of the Kinks tracks is spotty too - seven tracks from 1965
and before, four from after 1985, but very little from either
of the Kinks' most creative periods, the anti-psychedelic
concept albums of the late '60s, or the top-flight arena rock
years, 1977-83. Perhaps there were difficulties in obtaining
permission to use certain songs, but the collection suffers
as a result by relying on British Invasion filler like "Long
Tall Shorty," and uninspired late '80s hard rock like "Rock
and Roll Cities."
And there's
really no need for new versions of several '60s Kinks singles,
which is the only reason why these Kronikles extend
to 1998. These songs were meant to be heard in their original
form. Fortunately, a few of them are; "You Really Got Me"
still sounds ahead of its time, even after 35 years. In the
liner notes we learn that Davies came across the classic fuzz-box
guitar sound which propelled early Kinks hits such as this
one by hooking up three cheap amps to each other, slashing
the speaker cones with a razor blade, and cranking the volume
to 11. it's no wonder that the Kinks' back catalogue was rediscovered
in the midst of the late '70s punk revival. Unfinished
Business is saved somewhat by the inclusion of several
tunes from Dave Davies' long out of print early '80s solo
albums, "AFL1-3603" and "Glamour." The Kinks at this time
were experiencing perhaps the most massive artistic and commercial
revival that any of the original '60s British Invasion bands
(other than the Rolling Stones) have had since then. Not a
money-starved, get-the-lads-back-together-and-sell-some-T-shirts
reunion tour, mind you. The hard rock the Kinks were doing
in this era such as the anti-carol "Father Christmas," the
working class anthem "Low Budget," and even the mega-hits
"Come Dancing" and "Don't Forget to Dance," was vital, focused
and incisive. And it didn't get the least bit watered down
in Dave Davies' solo projects. "Imaginations Real," from 1980,
lest we forget, was a top twenty hit, and a great one at that
- a bouncy midtempo song influenced by artsy new wave such
as Roxy Music or the Talking Heads. The hard-driving "World
is Changing Hands" should have been a hit too with its relentless
beat and sing-along chorus. Nine songs from these two albums
are included, and each one drifts by and sucks you in with
its own unique mood; the screaming pleas of "Nothing More
to Lose," the witty wordplay of Unfinished Business,
the exotic beauty of "Eastern Eyes." it's pretty incredible
how undated it all sounds - only "World of Our Own" with its
whiny synthesizers is unmistakably 1981, but it's such a good
song it hardly matters.
Dave Davies
has written some magnificent songs, many of which appear here,
but this cannot be viewed as a comprehensive Kinks retrospective,
or even a comprehensive Dave Davies one. It probably would
have been best to reissue these solo gems on their own rather
then stick them in the middle of a second-best-of-the-Kinks
attempt. But at least "Unfinished Business" does bring up
an issue that needs to be addressed - why haven't the Kinks
received the multi-disc box set treatment yet that they so
richly deserve? Until they do, listeners of this Dave Davies
primer who want to hear more should go out and invest in the
"Kink Kronikles," which covers 1964-71, and "Come Dancing
with the Kinks," which covers 1977-86. Both of these are double
albums which do far more justice to this often-overlooked
classic rock band than any Dave Davies collection ever could.
4.0 out
of 5.0 (for the solo material)
2.0 out
of (for the Kinks-not-Kinks retrospective)
3.0 out
of 5.0 on average
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| Artist |
Dave
Davies |
| Album
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Unfinished
Business |
| Label |
Velvel |
| Date |
01.12.99 |
| Rating |
3.0 out of
5.0
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