Posted in Album Reviews

Lily Allen – West End Girl (2025)

Over the last few years, the music world waits with baited breath for each new Taylor Swift album to  carefully dissect the lyrics to figure out who the song are about. While that is happening, Lily Allen snuck in through the backdoor with her recent West End Girl album that outlines in great detail the breakdown of her relationship with actor David Harbour. The album plays like a concept album that The Streets would have released many years ago.  An arms length list of producers help craft an auto tuned album filled with adult styled beats and stories of heartbreak,  but in the Lily Allen spirit of snuck in jokes and classic one liners.

The title track is string laden with a passage that includes a one-sided conversation between Lily and Harbour while she describes getting the lead part in a West End London play. Nothing is held back lyrically and songs touch on lack of sex in their marriage, infidelity (to put it mildly), his own “Pussy Palace”, and calling up one of the girls that he was suspected of not only sleeping with but also playing “Tennis” with. All this while Lily asks, “who’s Madeline?”.

On “Ruminating’, the one-sided open relationship asks “If it has to happen, baby, do you want to know?” while later Lily sings that “A life with you looked good on paper” over the bouncy beats of “Nonmonogamummy”.  Towards the end, a posting on a dating website asks, “I’m almost nearly forty, I’m just shy of five-foot-two/I’m a mum to teenage children, does that sound like fun to you?”

For people following, Lily Allen’s life has been an open book over the years of quotable interviews, addictions, broken relationships, unfortunate miscarriages, and later successfully giving birth to children. West End Girl is a fascinating run through her last relationship and does hold the listener’s attention to wonder, “what’s next”.  Whether it holds up in several years time remains to be seen.

7.5/10

Posted in Listed

Favourite Distant (Re)Discoveries 2018

5. Paris Angels – Perfume (Song): When going down a YouTube rabbit hole late one night, we discovered this lost track from the early 90s Madchester scene. We like to consider ourselves fairly up on British guitar bands from that era but had never even heard of this band before. With well over 200K views on YouTube, it is not obscure by any stretch and the anthemic quality to the track is a good reason why. The “loved up” version on Apple Music is the one to get.

4. Pet Shop Boys – Please/Further Listening 84-86 (Album): Over the past two years, Pet Shop Boys have been re-releasing remastered versions of their albums along with B-sides and rarities discs. The first album in their long career,Please provided a worldwide smash hit in “West End Girls”, a handful of great singles, and memorable album tracks. The second disc is a strong collection of dance mixes and B-sides almost as good as what appears on the original album (“In The Night”, “Was That What It Was?”).

3. Paul Simon – The Paul Simon Songbook (Album): Taking advantage of sales and gift cards, we picked up both the Simon & Garfunkel box set as well as the solo Paul Simon collection. While the S&G debut failed to deliver, many of those songs appear on the Paul Simon Songbook a year later in better form (“The Sound of Silence”, “He Was My Brother”) along with acoustic version of future classics (“I Am A Rock”, “Kathy’s Song”). The recordings are sparse and at times Simon delivers them by spitting out the lyrics but this album helped gain a following in England and superstardom back home was only a few months away.

2. Lily Allen (Feat. Giggs) – Trigger Bang (Song): Right at the end of 2017, Allen released one of her best singles in years. A brief intro by Giggs before the lady herself steps in singing about her past party lifestyle. As with her best songs, “Trigger Bang” was self-aware with a chorus that sticks in the head for days.

1. The Beatles – Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band 2CD Deluxe (Album): This was an easy one. Released in November of 2017, I received this at Christmas last year and started listening in early 2018. The original album continues to be a wonder and the new remix by Giles Martin/Sam Okell make it even more so. After listening to the album for the 1000th time and just when you think it couldn’t get any better, “A Day In The Life” appears at the end. The second disc of different recording takes with new versions of “Strawberry Fields Forever” and “Penny Lane” was better than most rarities collections. It is one that will continue to get played for years to come (see: the title track, “Lucy In the Sky With Diamonds” and “Getting Better”).