In the late 1970s, composer and producer David Cunningham
was savvy enough to cloak his experimental music in the disguise of a novelty
record, at least for a while; his fractured deconstructions of Eddie Cochran's
"Summertime Blues" and Barrett Strong's "Money," released
under the moniker the Flying Lizards, managed to inch into the pop charts
because folks thought they were some sort of musical joke, even though
Cunningham's wit didn't negate the seriousness of his musical ambitions. After
the international success of "Money," Virgin Records wanted a Flying
Lizards album to go along with it, and the resulting LP was where Cunningham's
cred as an artist ran up against his instincts as a pop satirist. The principle
reason "Money" became a left-field hit was that even though the song
had been bent within an inch of its life, it still had a catchy hook and, if
you wanted to, you could dance to it. That can't honestly be said for the new
material Cunningham and his associates put together for the album; except for
Bertold Brecht and Kurt Weill's "Der Song von Mandelay," which
doesn't have an honestly memorable hook, the new tracks are all originals and
they're informed by the space and anything-goes vibe of dub instead of
radio-ready pop, and while they're intelligent and well-executed, they're not
especially compelling. Through the soundscapes that dominate the second half of
this album are more interesting to talk about than to hear, at least they're
better than the vocal tracks closer to the beginning, which sound both
pretentious and musically flawed. The Flying Lizards' first album unwittingly
followed one of the greatest traditions of '50s and '60s pop -- take a hit
single, surround it with a whole bunch of filler less interesting than the hit,
and presto! You have an album.