It was goodbye to Basildon and Braintree, hello to Bel Air and Beverly Hills.
Kershaw had always threatened the big-budget, US-recorded album, and in 1989 he delivered it. And, to no-one’s great surprise, it was an excellent collection, one of the best ‘Brit-Goes-Stateside’ pop records of the decade.
Recorded over four months in LA, The Works – released 30 years ago this week – saw Kershaw put together some of his best material to date with two top-notch drummers (Vinnie Colaiuta and Jeff Porcaro) in tow, the great Jerry Hey on horn arrangements, Paulinho Da Costa on percussion, ex-Zappa keyboardist Peter Wolf producing and backing vocals from Michael McDonald and Siedah Garrett.
And yet it was also the straw that broke the camel’s back, underselling drastically, cutting ties with MCA Records and leading Kershaw into decades of back-room writing and producing. But maybe he was happier that way (and he did write the enormo-hit ‘The One And Only’ for Chesney Hawkes a few years later).
But from August to December 1987, Kershaw was hob-nobbing with Rod Temperton, Quincy Jones and Toto, flirting with the kinds of scenes that he had mocked on ‘Radio Musicola’ and ‘City Of Angels’. Reportedly he didn’t get on very well with Wolf, virtually re-recording the entire album back in London alongside Australian producer Julian Mendelsohn (Level 42’s World Machine).
But hey, the hard work paid off. There’s nothing else in the ’80s pop canon quite like the techno/pop/fusion flash of ‘Don’t Ask Me’, ‘Wounded Knee’ and ‘Cowboys and Indians’, and Colaiuta’s extraordinary drum performances had players rushing to their practice rooms. In particular, the former track has that fill… If only Vinnie had played on a few of the other machine-driven tracks. And Kershaw coaxes Porcaro to play a classic half-time shuffle on the superb ‘Walkabout’.
It’s still hard to believe that ‘One Step Ahead’ and ‘Elisabeth’s Eyes’ (very influenced by Scritti) completely flopped as singles (though I would have gone with ‘Lady On The Phone’). They still sound great today, with brilliant choruses and nice grooves. ‘Burning At Both Ends’ may be the standout of the album, with its Middle-Eastern-flavoured hook and superb Siedah Garrett backup vox. Slightly less impressive are ‘Take My Place’ and ‘One World’; both could be Climie Fisher or Robbie Nevil.
The album disappeared without trace both in the UK and US. As far as solo pop success was concerned, the game was up. But it’s a shame that the kind of intelligent, superbly-played pop heard on The Works was unsustainable by the end of the ‘80s. As Nik so succinctly puts it on his website:
“Los Angeles for four months with producer Peter Wolf. Get to record with some legends: Jerry Hey, Larry Williams, Paulinho Da Costa, Jeff Porcaro, Vinnie Colaiuta. House in Nichols Canyon; Rented Mustang; Earthquake. Constantly bumping heads with Peter. End up finishing album myself in London. More record company upheaval; another MD; another A&R person. Not looking good. European tour with Elton John. Goodbye MCA. Time for a break...”
At last! That elusive Frank Zappa, Nik Kershaw connection.
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Yeah! I had to check a few times to make sure it was THAT Peter Wolf…
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“The Works” should have been called “The Masterpieces” ! This album is one of my absolute favourite from Nik, really (even though, for some obscure reasons, a lot of people seem to prefer the previous “Radio Musicola” – that I don’t like – and neglecting this one…) On “The Works”, the only two tracks that I’m not too fond of are “Don’t ask me” and “Lady on the phone”, but they are just OK, and not bad at all !
For me, the real highlights here might be “Cowboys & indians”, “Wounded knee” and “Walkabout”. Too bad this album did not have the recognition it deserved ! According to Nik, “The Works” was realeased at a time when people already turned they back to his music because of the too long hiatus between “The Riddle” and “Radio Musicola”.
What made his career rather difficult was essentially just a question of time of album releases !
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It certainly hasn’t had the recognition it deserved. To me this is the album Nik had wanted to make from the beginning of his solo career – he just went for it, no holds barred! It’s his most ‘muso’ album, and that’s a compliment.
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I wish he would still make music like this. I find his output since those days very conventional and slightly ponderous
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Hi Ian, I agree…
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Interesting write up and other’s comments too. Actually my least favourite and least “listened-to” album of his, despite some outstanding tracks (One Step Ahead, Burning At Both Ends, Wounded Knee, Elizabeth’s Eyes).
Nit pick, but you say “leading Kershaw into decades of back-room writing and producing.” but it was really only a decade: The superb “15 Minutes” (my favourite album) being released 10 years after The Works in 1999.
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True. Maybe it just felt like decades! I wasn’t a fan of ’15 Minutes’… But your message might make me try again with it.
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