PlatinumWeird – Make Believe (1974/2006)
Artist: PlatinumWeird
Title: Make Believe
Year Of Release: 1974/2006
Label: Interscope Records
Genre: Rock, Pop Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 38:11
Total Size: 97/278 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Title: Make Believe
Year Of Release: 1974/2006
Label: Interscope Records
Genre: Rock, Pop Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 38:11
Total Size: 97/278 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Will You Be Around (3:32)
02. Lonely Eyes (3:27)
03. Happiness (3:33)
04. Make Believe (3:33)
05. Picture Prefect (4:07)
06. If You Believe In Love (3:29)
07. Love Can Kill The Blues (5:05)
08. I Pray (3:24)
09. Piccadilly Lane (3:09)
10. Goodbye My Love (4:52)
Bass – Matthew Sugarman
Drums – Brian Parfitt, Ringo Starr (tracks: 4, 6)
Piano, Organ, Mellotron – Noel Chambers
Vocals – Erin Grace
Vocals, Guitar – Dave Stewart*
Before he was in the Tourists and long before he was in the Eurythmics, Dave Stewart was in Platinum Weird, a mid-'70s band that influenced Fleetwood Mac, especially vocalist Stevie Nicks, who was entranced by the emotional and mysterious Erin Grace, Weird's lead singer, who was in a Lindsey Buckingham/Nicks-type relationship with Stewart, right up till she disappeared into rock mythology. A documentary television special was made and then aired on VH1 right as a bunch of fan sites appeared on the Net. Says right here on the back of the disc that these are Weird's lost recordings from back in 1974, but one listen to Make Believe and it's obvious these aren't lost recordings but rather a hoax that has much more to do with mashing Keane, Kelly Clarkson, and the later Eurythmics albums together than reviving the Fleetwood Mac sound. A lot of this has to do with Erin Grace, actually a pseudonym of Kara DioGuardi, a strong vocalist and songwriter who has worked for Paris Hilton, Lindsay Lohan, and plenty of the American Idol winners and finalists. DioGuardi does make an attempt to write outside of her usual style, but she's not trying to recapture the '70s at all. Instead, tracks like "Happiness" and "Goodbye My Love" sound like huge, modern Broadway-bound tunes, which makes some sense when you find out DioGuardi and Stewart first began working together as possible songwriters for the the Pussycat Dolls, who were still a cabaret act rather than the dance-pop "group" they became. "Piccadilly Lane" is one of the few times Make Believe sounds like it has a suitable-for-the-time Beatles hangover, but the other high points -- the title track and "Picture Perfect" -- are straight 21st century pop/rock with DioGuardi in full effect. The filler sounds like tracks the Eurythmics or Lohan haven't gotten to yet, with DioGuardi pouring her heart into every song, whether the songs fully deserve it or not. In the end, Stewart comes off as an incredibly bland eccentric for claiming this is more mysterious and wild than it is, while DioGuardi steals the show with her inspired performance. The oversold hype sours what is simply a worthwhile, professional pop effort.