Mat McHugh, better known as the frontman of The Beautiful Girls has just released his second solo album Love Come Save Me. This year it has been ten years since The Beautiful Girls, and by his own admission, Mat has tried it all.
With his most recent release, the Australian songwriter is offering the music to fans for free as a digital download. McHugh claims on the albums website that Love Come Save Me is a way to thank and give back to those who have supported him and his music throughout the years.
“My only goal is to spread love and give something back to the universe,” he writes in a letter to fans.
McHugh has said that Love Come Save Me is the best work he has ever done; and listening to the album you get a sense that he has put much more of himself into these songs than ever before. It is this honesty, coupled with the simple, catchy melodies that make the album such an outstanding piece of work. It really is no surprise that the album has been downloaded thousands of times by fellow music lovers. The songs simply draw you in and make you want to share the love, which ultimately is what this album is all about.
The album instantly draws listeners in with the opening track "Go Don't Stop". The song’s upbeat reggae chords played on an acoustic guitar coupled with McHugh's effortless vocals and simple lyrics make it unforgettable.
All of the songs on Love Come Save Me are simple, yet reflective in nature evoking images of life, love, sun, and surf. The stripped back acoustic melodies make the reflective lyrics even more effective. A particular standout on the album is the second track "Strange Days". Once again McHugh's reflective lyrics make the song shine as he sings about his dreams and fears. It is the lyrics that make this song so powerful and evoke emotions in listeners. It is with this track that McHugh demonstrates that Love Come Save Me is much more than reggae-inspired summer tunes.
There are a handful of standout tracks on the album including "A Pocket Full Of Shells", which features a stunning harmonica part to accompany the acoustic melody, and lyrics that make you believe that love really has the power to save someone.
The closing track "Breaking Your Fall (For Kingston)" is another standout on the album. The song immediately feels different to others on the album, it is slower and has a raw quality sounding more like we are listening in to McHugh singing a lullaby to his young son, as he warns him about the nature of the world.
Love Come Save Me is an album that should be listened to, above all it is an album that should be shared. If you only download one album this year make it this one, you have nothing to lose and so much to gain.
http://lovecomesaveme.com/
Criminally underappreciated, 1997’s Twentieth Century Blues is easily one of Marianne Faithfull’s best recordings; it is also one of the best vocal pop albums to come out of the last twenty years. Before an appreciative audience at Paris’ New Morning, Faithfull and piano accompanist Paul Trueblood engage the formidable songbook of Kurt Weill and Bertolt Brecht, conjuring up tales of broken spouses and murderous whores, of jilted lovers and wistful femme fatales. Faithfull’s famously ravaged voice dominates throughout, chewing up her scenes like some louche daughter to Katherine Hepburn.
Musically, the album benefits greatly from its spare and intimate setting. Trueblood’s gentle playing is a welcome relief from the (slightly cheesy) overproduction of earlier Faithfull releases, and there is a merciful lack of exposition on the vintage and cultural significance of these songs, which keeps everything sounding remarkably fresh. Harry Nilsson’s “Don’t Forget Me,” one of a handful of non-Weill/Brecht numbers and the album’s “newest” track, was already thirty years old at the time of recording. Even so, Faithfull renders its narrator as an unmistakable contemporary. In a somber tone that hints equally at yearning and defeat, she sings:
When we’re older and full of cancer
It doesn’t matter now, come on get happy
‘Cause nothing lasts forever
And I will always love you
The Weill and Brecht covers – which are a full two generations older – come off sounding edgy and raw, thanks in part to some exceptional translations provided by Frank McGuinness, who wisely chose to honour the harsh directness of Brecht’s original German. On “Pirate Jenny” (a Threepenny Operanumber dating from 1928!) the saltiness of the whore’s language perfectly compliments the pettiness of her murder fantasy:
And look out, lads, the town will be flat as the ground
This dirty shit hotel will be spared wreck and ruin
And you'll say, "Who’s the fancy bitch lives there?"
Faithfull, for her part, sings the role with ghoulish warmth, clearly relishing the deaths of her fellow townspeople:
Normal 0 false false false MicrosoftInternetExplorer4 Come the dot of twelve, it will be still in the harbour
When they ask me, "Well, who’s going to die?"
And you'll hear me whisper, oh so sweetly, "All of them!"
To many contemporary listeners, used to the emotionally “authentic” singing style of modern blues and rock vocalists, songs like “Pirate Jenny” will come as a revelation. Faithfull isn’t asking the listener to identify with Jenny’s bloodlust, or to suppose that the singer is in fact a sociopathic prostitute. Through the intelligence of her line readings, she instead leads the listener into an unsettling conversation, one between our own moral judgments and a unpleasant truth.
On “Surabaya Johnny,” Faithfull curses out an ex-lover with terrible ferocity:
Normal 0 false false false MicrosoftInternetExplorer4You said a lot, Johnny
All one big lie, Johnny
You cheated me blind, Johnny
From the minute we met
I hate you so, Johnny
When you stand there grinning, Johnny
Take that damn pipe out of your mouth, you rat.
The anguish and anger are palpable. Perhaps we admit that there is something righteous (or even heroic) in the nakedness of this woman’s expression. All the same, we are left feeling slightly repulsed: there is something ugly about her reaction that stops us from identifying with her. Who, after all, would readily believe themselves to be so pathetic or malicious? The listener again confronts a troubling discrepancy — that between their deluded belief in love’s general benignity and its harrowing potential. By making the conceit of this song compelling, Faithfull prevents us from easily shrugging off the emotional dilemma.
Perhaps it is this focus on artificiality and conceit, which finally sets 20th Century Blues apart from most contemporary pop. As a rule, today’s vocalists (Feist, Bon Iver, Robin Pecknold, to name just a few) try to collapse the difference between their emotional selves and their singing persona. Such an approach puts a high value on intuition and spontaneity, at the expense of vocal precision and deliberation. (In indie music circles, to label a singer’s style as “deliberate” can in fact be a serious insult.)
Faithfull, on the other hand, wants to outline this singing persona as distinctly as possible. Her vocals are precise, and her many affectations are very deliberate. And whereas most pop singers like to boast of the freshness of their material, many of the songs on Blues had been part of Faithfull’s repertoire for decades — the title track was first performed in 1974; her first recording of “Ballad of the Soldier’s Wife” dates from 1985, when she covered it for a Kurt Weill tribute album, Lost in the Stars; and the European tour that spawned Blues, titled “An Evening in the Weimar Republic,” was itself the product of 1991 Gate Theatre production of The Threepenny Opera, featuring the combined talents of Faithfull, McGuinness and Trueblood.
By the time she appeared at The New Morning, then, Faithfull knew these songs inside and out, the protagonists, their perspectives, and everything in between. The resulting performance was — and remains — provocative, moving, and highly intelligent. What makes this album vital has to do with the nature of its intelligence, the way in which it provokes and moves us. Where so many singers have the effect of reducing their audience to a bevy of passive spectators, Faithfull gives us a job to do. We are asked to listen to each of these songs and consider what they have to say — but with the tacit understanding that not a single one of them can fully be trusted. In the best spirit of Brechtian theatre,Blues speaks out against the safety of our listening post and instead implores us to judge and intervene.
Ultimately, it is the very uniqueness of this approach that lends the album an unintended commemorative quality. Marianne Faithfull would continue her conversation with Weill and Brecht on the 1998 follow-up, The Seven Deadly Sins, but this time from within a classical framework, accompanied by the Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra and male vocal ensemble. Only on 20th Century Blues did she bring the vitality of these songwriters — and the older, “artificial” musical sensibility they represented — to a broader, pop audience. Sadly, that audience responded with a shrug.

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