The Christians - Colour (1990)
Artist: The Christians
Title: Colour
Year Of Release: 1990
Label: Island /260 455
Genre: Pop/Rock
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 48:42
Total Size: 544 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Colour
Year Of Release: 1990
Label: Island /260 455
Genre: Pop/Rock
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 48:42
Total Size: 544 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Man Don't Cry [0:04:45.50]
02. I Found Out [0:04:30.17]
03. Greenbank Drive [0:04:24.65]
04. All Talk [0:04:37.40]
05. Words [0:07:04.00]
06. Community Of Spirit [0:05:12.60]
07. There You Go Again [0:06:00.68]
08. One More Baby In Black [0:05:41.55]
09. In My Hour Of Need [0:06:24.45]
Given the obvious talent at the Christians' disposal, it's odd how uninspiring their music is. Gary Christian has a remarkable voice, soulful without resorting to the showy mannerisms that derail so many lesser singers. In his previous band, the Yachts, keyboardist Henry Priestman revealed himself to be one of the wittiest and most melodically subtle songwriters of the post-punk age, as well as one of its most immediately distinctive instrumentalists. The subtle melodicism is still there on 1990's Colour, but the cleverness and distinctive personality are pretty much gone. The lyrics are uniformly po-faced and mushily inspirational, with none of the sparkling wit of the Yachts, and Laurie Latham's ultra-slick production doesn't even have the over-the-top sonic gimmickry of his earlier albums for Squeeze and Paul Young, making Colour musically indistinguishable from the likes of Phil Collins and Simple Minds. Worst of all, the songs are absurdly elongated, stretching three minutes' worth of musical and lyrical content into tracks that tend to stretch into the five- to seven-minute range. Despite the title, Colour is stultifyingly monochromatic. The closing "In My Hour of Need" is a charming sendoff, though, by far the most memorable track on the album.