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It's ear-candy not music with an appetising bite. Lyrics are
generally platitudinous or psychobabble while the arrangements are
unswervingly orthodox and far too hungry for the hit. Bolder tactics
to stretch her might have been rather more effective.
The pity is that Dusty Springfield should have been able to recruit her
own crack team of supporters. But instead of reuniting her with the
Pet Shop Boys or sending her off with a sensitive regenerator of careers
like Don Was, Springfield was landed with a crew of Nashville cats who
were rendered clawless by an anaesthetic mix.
So her vocals swirl about vaguely rather than rise in triumph, defiance
or surprise. Teaming with Daryl Hall for a duet on "Wherever Would I Be",
a song written by Diane Warren, may have made perfect A&R sense in the
planning stage but the ballad squibs out and never threatens to explode.
Far too often, A Very Fine Love promotes itself as a formula motivated
by fear. Fans of both George Michael and Springfield may feel they've
uncovered a few extra clues as to why Michael was so desperate and eager to
depart Sony.
When the guitars and vocal harmonies are reined back, she does gain
some extra room to manoeuvre on following tracks like "Go Easy On Me"
and "You Are The Storm" but both also leave you suspecting that this
comeback album would have been improved by production policies that
realised that restraint is her rapier.
Unfortunately A Very Fine Love collapses between the twin stools
of discretion and drama and only fitfully attains either. Another
disappointment is "Old Habits Die Hard", co-written by Terry Britton
with Graham Lyle. After all, Britton's songs helped Tina Turner
flounce back to the top. But no chance here with the soapy production.
Ultimately, you can only remind yourself that Dusty Springfield isn't
the first and won't be the last great singing star gulled into driving
the wrong vehicle for her talents. There must be another album and it
also must be both more rigorous and radical than A Very Fine Love.
Bill Graham
(Hot Press, August, 1995)