| Average Rating: |
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| Sales Rank: | 235415 (lower is better) |
| Price Used: | $17.31 |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | |
| Release Date: | 1998-11-24 |
| Label: | Velvel Records |
| UPC: | 634677972324 |
| Binding: | Audio CD |
| Published By: | Velvel Records |
| ASIN: | B00000FDJR |
| Category: | Music |
If you're expecting something like "You've Really Got Me Now" or "Destroyer" and have little openness toward music beyond those boundaries, you will probably dislike Soap Opera. On the other hand, if you appreciate a catchy song regardless of style, you may well love this concept album as it has a lot going for it.
The premise of Soap Opera is that a rock star trades places with an ordinary man (Norman), stepping into his life, living at his house, going to his job at the office-all the while gathering material for his songs: "I'm immortalizing his life / And I'll even sleep with his wife / For the sake of art." As the joke goes, someone's got to do it. It's hard not to smile when the Ray Davies character puts forth his "noble sacrifice."
In parts, this is an unbelievably campy CD, but it suits the material well. "Ordinary People" and "You Make It All Worthwhile" are just such numbers, but they're so infectious it's hard not to have them running through your head for days. Both are standout tracks. In the latter, Norman's wife and the Star character (Davies) have a brief squabble over her offering to serve shepherd's pie for dinner, which is far from a favorite of the singer's. But he graciously relents to eat it--for the sake of art, of course.
"Nine To Five" is a beautiful ballad about the boredom of working at the office. There are songs about heading to work in rush hour and heading to the pub afterward to unwind. Even Norman gets a turn to sing as he realizes at the end that he must give up his rock star dreams and become once again just "A Face in the Crowd."
There are a lot of musical styles represented here. "Holiday Romance" sounds like it belongs in an old Fred Astaire movie while "Everybody's A Star," "Can't Stop the Music" and "Ducks on the Wall" are more typical rockers.
Soap Opera is a celebration of the mundane. But it's far from mundane itself. This is a truly enjoyable album if you're open for something that differed from both the good early Kinks stuff and the outstanding late seventies Kinks offerings like Sleepwalker and Misfits that followed the concept album period. As for me, I think this is a great album.
the concept here seems to be something like this: a big rockstar wants to record a song (or album) about being a "normal, working class" person. so he trades places with a man named norman, and we hear as the main character has to adjust to the mundane life of the everyman. tracks like "rush hour blues", "nine to five", "have another drink", and others, all perfectly convey the numbing drudgery of the clock punching joe who lurches through the motions from day to day. these aren't really original themes, but davies communicates them with a genuine sense of empathy that, in the hands of a lesser songwriter, would devolve into caricature or condescending pity.
personally, i'm not a big fan of concept albums. i think that they're bloated and self-indulgent, and i associate them with "prog rock", which i hate. what saves "a soap opera" is that it's not impossible to listen to the songs on their own, out of the context of the larger story. doing so makes the songs seem a little redundant thematically, but it doesn't rob them of their quality.
the highlights include:
"underneath the neon sign" - a ballad lamenting the rise of the giant post-industrial cityscape at the expense of nature (a theme that would've been perfectly at home on "...village green"), complete with a ridiculous, but charming, horn drenched bridge.
"holiday romance" - a classic kinks "music hall" type number that would've fit perfectly on "muswell hillbillies".
"you make it all worthwhile" - an overtly sentimental, but still very touching song. the staccato strings during the choppy, dramatic verse, contrast beautifully with the calm and ease of the chorus, where the main character explains to his wife that, even though his job is driving him mad, she does exactly what the title suggests.
even if you weren't impressed by the preservation albums, i'd still recommend picking this album up. by kinks standards, it may not be the best album of their career, but it's still head and shoulders above most of the other pompous dreck that was being recorded in 1975.