NEW RELEASES PAUL HEATON & JACQUI ABBOTT MANCHESTER CALLING
MIDDLE-AGED KITCHEN SINK DRAMAS ABOUND ON THE DUO’S LATEST, WHICH AFFECTIONATELY BREATHES NEW LIFE INTO THE NEGLECTED ART OF THE DUET VIRGIN EMI
No one writes like Paul Heaton. He spurns fashion, zooms in on dreary minutiae, trades in genres as varied as they’re unstylish – Manchester Calling hints at Broadway musicals and English limericks – and few protagonists emerge unscarred. But his plainspoken sincerity, tempered with a wry, compassionate wit, ensure that his songs speak to the heart, whatever their form, whomsoever they address.
Inevitably, on this fourth album with Jacqui Abbott, Heaton frequently tackles relationships, notably co-dependency’s multiple layers. The sprightly ska of If You Could See Your Faults finds Abbott asking “What’s better?/To be ignored, or to be used?” and…
