Jesus of Cool (Reissue)

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Jesus of Cool (Reissue) album cover
Album Information
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Total Tracks: 21   Total Length: 62:49

eMusic Review 0

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Barry Walters

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
A pop-about-pop landmark finally gets its long-overdue reissue.
2008 | Label: Yep Roc Records / Redeye

Few 30-year-old albums sound as fresh and as ripe for rediscovery as Jesus of Cool. Unavailable or out of print throughout much of the CD era, the debut LP by Nick Lowe (renamed Pure Pop for Now People for the American market with a reconfigured track listing) was unique in its day for both embracing pop readymades and satirizing the exploitative and fickle culture that creates and consumes them. Nowadays, every indie rocker and blogger skewers the record biz while celebrating its guilty pleasures, but in 1978 such ambivalence was both radical (it was the first New Wave album to encapsulate the budding movement's love/hate relationship with everything that preceded it) and misunderstood (Rolling Stone dismissed it as “a catalog of socko production effects held together with one-shot jokes.”)

Having struggled for years as the bassist of failed pub-rock band Brinsley Schwarz, Lowe created Jesus during his ascent as Stiff Records'in-house producer of the Damned and Elvis Costello, and his sense of glee upon finally commanding his own destiny is palpable: No matter how cynical his lyrics get (check his still-shocking ode to fallen film star Marie Prevost, here dubbed “Marie Provost”), the music remains joyous. Nicknamed Basher for… read more »

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It’s consistent in its inconsistency.

TheLarch

I was too young to remember this release on its first go-round and only discovered it recently when I was exploring other artists from the era. The first time it popped up on my radar I thought it was rather meandering and inconsistent – hopping genres with every cut. But perhaps that’s its appeal. It’s consistent in its inconsistency, if you get my meaning. This edition includes loads of extras but can be a bit intimidating to newcomers (like myself). I found the track listing a bit perplexing. Some claim there were 11 cuts on the original, but one source lists 12. Another insists the original record ended at track 11, but on this edition, track 11 appears to be a bonus live version of “Heart Of The City” – the studio version being banished to the bottom of the track listing. That said, it strikes me as a pretty good mash-up of early Nick Lowe and I downloaded the whole thing without regret.

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Every style covered

tromafiend02

Nick does rock, pop, surf, funk, ballads and about a dozen other genres really well in a single album.

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Nick at his best

madformusic

This is a masterpiece. Nick was on a roll for while there as an artist in his own right as well as his production for others. CTracy - This IS the original version of Cruel to be Kind. Nick rerecorded it for Labor of Lust and that version is the one all of us are familiar with.

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Great to see it here.

DontWannaNicknameDammit

There was never a good US release of this before now. This is better than the crap vinyl that came out at the time.

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i love this album

kajman

it was great to see it here and rediscover it. yeah, its dated, but its still great!

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Too much of a great thing

EMUSIC-00B90163

I can do without many of the outtakes, but in a digital world, that's no problem. The original record (which ends at track 11) sounds fantastic, and the inclusion of "They Called It Rock" (which replaced "Shake and Pop" on the original US version in '78) is a great bonus.

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This still holds up!

MrDavidCPA

I had not heard this in years, and it still works for me.

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Excellent reissue of a new wave classic

Neptuneman08

The original track listing of the UK issue of Jesus of Cool (Pure Pop for Now People in US). Added bonus is all of the single tracks and US album cuts with demos and alternate tracks added on to the Pure Pop from Nick the cool Lowe.

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thanks for this!

etoo

How great it is to have this rereleased! I was more into Elvis Costello when this came out, but it is nice to know now another piece of that whole British late-70s scene.

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Cruel Original

EMUSIC-01EF5063

Just because this came out After the other versions doesn't mean anything. This "original version" could have been recorded 10 years before for all you know and now its seen the light of day. Did you think the company re-issuing this record made a mistake and that you know more about the music then they do? Hardly.

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They Say All Music Guide

On the cover of his solo debut album Jesus of Cool, Nick Lowe is pictured in six rock & roll get-ups — hippie, folkie, greasy rock & roller, new wave hipster — giving the not-so-subtle implication that this guy can do anything. Nick proves that assumption correct on Jesus of Cool, a record so good it was named twice, as Lowe’s American record label got the jitters with Jesus and renamed it Pure Pop for Now People, shuffling the track listing (but not swapping songs) in the process. As it happens, both titles are accurate, but while the U.K. title sounds cooler, capturing Lowe’s cheerfully blasphemous rock & roll swagger, Pure Pop describes the sound of the album, functioning as a sincere description of the music while conveying the wicked, knowing humor that drives it. This is pop about pop, a record filled with songs that tweak or spin conventions, or are about the industry. Only a writer with a long, hard battle with the biz in his past could write “Music for Money” and much of Jesus of Cool does feel like a long-delayed reaction to the disastrous American debut of Brinsley Schwarz, where the band’s grand plans at kick-starting their career came crumbling down and pushed them into the pubs. Once there, the Brinsleys spearheaded the back-to-basics pub rock movement in England and as the years rolled on the band got loose, as did Lowe’s writing, which got catchier and funnier on the group’s last two albums, Nervous on the Road and New Favourites of Brinsley Schwarz.
In retrospect, it’s possible to hear him inch toward the powerful pop of Jesus of Cool on the Dave Edmunds-produced New Favourites, plus the handful of singles the group cut toward the end of their career — it’s not far cry from the Brinsleys’ stomping cover of Tommy Roe’s “Everybody” to the shake and pop of Jesus — but even with this knowledge in hand, Jesus of Cool still sounds like an unexpected explosion as it bursts forth with blindingly bright colors and a cavalcade of giddy pure sound. Lowe is letting his id run wild: he’s dispensed with any remnants of good taste — well, apart from the gorgeous “Tonight,” the only time the album dips into ballads — and indulged in a second adolescence, bashing out three-chord rockers and cracking jokes with both his words and music. This reckless rock and pop works not just because the tracks crackle with excitement — not for nothing did Nick earn the name “Basher” in this period; he cut quickly and moved on, the performances sounding infectious and addictive — but because it’s written with the skill that Lowe developed in the Brinsleys. He knows how to twist words around, knows how to mine black humor in “Marie Provost,” knows how to splice “Nutted by Reality” into a brilliant McCartney parody, knows how to pull off the old Chuck Berry trick of spinning a tune into two songs, as he turns “Shake and Pop” into the faster, wilder “They Called It Rock.” That latter bit picks up a key bit about Jesus of Cool — it’s self-referential pop that loves the past but doesn’t treat it as sacred. It is the first post-modern pop record in how it plays as it builds upon tradition and how it’s all tied together by Lowe’s irrepressible irreverence. It’s hard to imagine any of the power pop of the next three decades without it, and while plenty have tried, nobody has made a better pure pop record than this…not even Nick (of course, he didn’t really try to make another record like this, either).
Nobody may have bettered Jesus of Cool, but Yep Roc’s 30th Anniversary edition of the album betters it by tacking on ten bonus tracks, all recorded after the demise of Brinsley Schwarz in 1974 and before the 1978 release of Jesus of Cool — a time that was dubbed The Wilderness Years on a 1992 compilation that gathered these stray tracks. Here, it was possible to hear Lowe shake off pub rock in favor of pop. Sometimes, he tried very hard to leave the past behind, as when he cut a series of bubblegum singles that they would force United Artists to cut him loose from his contract. The first of those, the Tartan Horde, cut a tribute single to the Bay City Rollers which turned into a Japanese hit (“Rollers Show” turned up on Jesus, but the Gary Glitter send-up “Allorolla” and “Bay City Rollers We Love You” did not), which kept UA’s interest high until Lowe’s Disco Brothers singles extinguished the label’s desire to keep him around, paving the way toward Jesus of Cool. Neither the two other Tartan Horde cuts or the Disco Brothers single are on this expanded edition (Yep Roc is offering it as a bonus download), nor are any of the harder-rocking cuts from The Wilderness Years — “Fool Too Long,” the two-chord “Truth Drug” and “I Got a Job” all are terrific reasons to seek the comp out after wearing out this reissue — but there is a heavy dose of that disc’s 18 songs, all skewing toward the bright, subversive pop that’s on the proper album. There are traces of pub rock here, in the rampaging “I Don’t Want the Night to End” and the country-rock “I Love My Label,” but they’re driven from the pub by a blindingly brilliant hook on the former and sly humor on the latter. These bonus tracks also showcase more of Lowe’s pop personalities: “Shake That Rat” is a delirious instrumental, he turns Sandy Posey’s “Born a Woman” upside down, he conveys the majestic sweep of the Wall of Sound on a cover of Goffin & King’s “Halfway to Paradise.” The bonus tracks also include “Heart of the City,” the B-side of “So It Goes,” the first single released on Stiff Records and thereby one of the opening salvos in the punk revolution (a live version was on the actual album), and an early version of “Cruel to Be Kind,” which would turn out to be Nick’s biggest hit just a couple years later. This early version is faster, wilder compared to the version he’d cut with Rockpile, and that description applies to all of his Jesus of Cool era. It’s when Nick Lowe ran wild, creating pop that was pure, peerless, and permanently thrilling. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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