Continuing our series on critics wrong-footed in real time, here's Nick Kent immune to The Cure's Seventeen Seconds
To be honest, this is not so much a "wrong" opinion - certainly not an opinion shown up by the passage of time, by History having come to a different view - so much as an opinion that differs from my own opinion!
The aspects that Kent finds frustrating - the vagueness, the tentativeness, the foggy pensiveness, a sense of things being withheld, emotional indeterminacy - are exactly the qualities of the album I find intriguing and attractive.
I feel like it's a record that could only come out of English suburbia... (Crawley is almost exactly the same distance from London as my hometown Berkhamsted is, just on the other side of the metropolis).
Yet having said that, the atmosphere sometimes puts me in mind of Pessoa's The Book of Disquiet
Because of my life experience it inevitably conjures Home Counties memories of listlessness-as-bliss... mystical mundanity...
A Thursday afternoon in an unseasonably damp, overcast August. Poor visibility, light drizzle muffling the sense of distance.
The mood reminds me of this scene in Jonathan Coe's The Rotters Club - an ecstasy of ennui enfolds the main character, an introspective teenage schoolboy... Time stands still.
Interesting that Kent detects an Eno-ish aspect here and there, because the record sometimes reminds me too of the washed-out ambience and washed-up characters in certain songs on Another Green World and Before and After Science.
I'd always thought The Cure on Seventeen Seconds were trying to pick up on the ethereal drift of side 2 of Closer - but checking the dates I see that they were making this record at around about the same time as Joy Division were working on their own second album.
Seventeen Seconds is all about that translucent sound.... the new toys they've got for the guitar... the subtle tricks that Mike Hedges came up with (the triggered drum whooosh in "A Forest").
Yes, for me, Seventeen Seconds is the only Cure album that I would actively put on.
Like with New Order, the Cure's best album is obviously going to be a best-of, a singles compilation.
Seventeen Seconds, though, is a consummate album-album... it corresponds to Trevor Horn's dictum that a great album consists of ten to twelve songs that all sound similar, just different enough- chips off the same lustrous block, as I said of Juju and a line probably recycled about various other albums over the years. (Trev's own example was Hats by The Blue Nile). It's
Having said it's an album album, Seventeen Seconds does also contain The Cure's most singular single: "A Forest", six minutes of gauche glory that sounds like nothing else in music before or since,
Kent closes his Seventeen Seconds review with a statement of being disappointed this time round but highly intrigued to know what their next move will be - I wonder if he did carry on following the Cure's arc and what he made of the subsequent albums, career triumphs, ever-growing megacult popularity? Did he bother to listen to this year's "towering, best album since ____" ? (I didn't).