Either a temporary project, a promising alliance that fell
apart, or a waste of time; Dali's Car and its sole effort isn't something
easily agreed upon, even by long-time fans of both Peter Murphy and Mick Karn.
Even its original appearance was fraught with doubt given that the two were
signed to separate record companies, resulting in the creation of a wholly new
label just to get it in print (Beggars Banquet has since taken over full
pressing on its own). While on the one hand Waking Hour is pretty much the sum
of its parts; Murphy's dramatic, edgy singing style and Karn's fluid,
immediately recognizable fretless bass and other instruments, plus percussion
from Paul Lawford; there was enough variety going on to set it apart enough
from the legacies of both Bauhaus and Japan. On the one hand, the band's music
feels a little harsher and more electronic than the flowing arrangements of
late Japan, no doubt accentuated by the electronic drums in place of Steve Jansen's
work. Similarly, the production feels a bit hollower; not quite demo level, but
a little more straightforward all around, occasional fripperies like the exotic
synth line on "His Box" aside. Meanwhile, Murphy avoids the more
torturous roars and screams of his most extreme work in Bauhaus; it's still
recognizably him at 50 paces off, but everything feels a touch gentler and more
meditative. He indulges in his usual cryptic images, admittedly (quite what
"Dali's Car" itself is meant to be is unclear) but as is so often the
case, his all-around performance is what counts the most. If nothing else, points
for credit for the cover art: a lovely reproduction of the famed Maxfield
Parrish painting Daybreak.