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Just... Fabulous Rock 'n' Roll

Current price: $13.99
Just... Fabulous Rock 'n' Roll
Just... Fabulous Rock 'n' Roll

Barnes and Noble

Just... Fabulous Rock 'n' Roll

Current price: $13.99

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In 1958,
Cliff Richard
became the first real-deal British rock star when his debut single "Move It" became a massive hit in the U.K. Compared to most of the first crop of English rock & rollers,
Richard
seemed at least a reasonable approximation of the genuine article imported from the United States. By the time
the Beatles
changed the game in the early '60s,
had already begun easing into more polished and less threatening sounds, and through most of his career he's been an all-purpose pop star, dividing his time between secular and Christian music when not busy with television appearances. But
still takes a stubborn pride in his status as a British rock pioneer, and at the age of 76 (a mere 58 years after "Move It"), he's released a collection of first-era rock & roll tunes performed in vintage style titled
Just....Fabulous Rock 'n' Roll
. Recorded in Nashville with a studio band clearly conversant in vintage rock and R&B,
reveals
's voice is in remarkably good shape for a man his age, and his instrument and his instincts serve him well here. However, this album suffers the same pitfall that trips up so many artists when they tackle an album of covers.
clearly enjoys this material, but he can only bring so much that's new to these songs, and he doesn't have a strong enough musical personality to keep one from remembering the originals -- and competing vocally with the likes of
Elvis Presley
,
Chuck Berry
Sam Cooke
Jerry Lee Lewis
, or
Little Richard
is a game where very few singers can win. (The album opens with an electronic duet between
and
Presley
on "Blue Suede Shoes," and it unfortunately makes clear that
was called "the British Elvis" more for good hair and stage presence than for being able to convincingly snarl.) And while an updated version of "Move It" shows
has his chops, it seems placid next to the classic original.
unexpectedly brings a bit of his own spirit to a sly cover of
John Lee Hooker
's "Dimples" (he also recruited
Peter Frampton
to play some strong guitar on the track), and two new songs in the classic rock & roll style fare well because they're not competing with the listener's memories. Perhaps
should have recorded a whole album of "new" vintage rock numbers; as it is,
is well crafted, but not an especially inspiring effort in rock nostalgia. ~ Mark Deming

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