eMusic Review 0
Remember the days when record labels still believed that middle-aged dudes could form successful rock bands? These guys do. Bolstered by his big comeback with 1988′s Cloud Nine, George Harrison invited Tom Petty, Roy Orbison, Bob Dylan and Jeff Lynne to jam together — and ended up selling 3 million copies of their record, more than Dylan had racked up on any of his studio albums.
Which makes sense: this fun-loving mix of rockabilly boot-stompers and back-porch folk singalongs was the rare chance to see these ultra-serious icons just goofing off. Dylan spoofed Springsteen on “Tweeter and the Monkey Man,” sprinkling the Boss’s song titles into his tale of (what else?) two Jersey kids on the run. All five singers crack their best dirty-uncle double-entendres (“You don’t need your wax job, you’re smooth enough for me… let me drive your pickup truck and park it where the sun don’t shine.”) Even Orbison — the crown prince of anguished ballads — seems to lighten up on “Handle With Care,” teasing that, even as an old guy, “I still have some love to give!” Sadly, Orbison died two months before the album’s release, but since then, it’s gotten… read more »