Album: Huey Lewis and the News - Weather | reviews, news & interviews
Album: Huey Lewis and the News - Weather
Album: Huey Lewis and the News - Weather
Perennial West Coast feel-good band bring the bland on possibly their final outing
Huey Lewis and the News were an unlikely mid-Eighties phenomenon. Their Sports album was a mega-success for a band already approaching early middle age.
It’s doubtful any member of Huey Lewis and the News will be much bothered by such an assessment. Ignoring their music, what’s always been appealing about them is a wry, self-depreciating attitude to their place in the scheme of things, the theme, in fact, of their 1984 hit “Hip to Be Square”. This is a band born initially of the mid-Sixties West Coast psychedelic scene, almost 20 years before they made it, a group who spent the punk era in London, something Lewis has credited with pushing them to go their own sweet way, ignoring critical opinion.
Their tenth album - and first in a decade - is more like an EP, consisting of only seven songs. It’s been heavily hinted it might be their last for Lewis is suffering from Meniere’s Disease, which chronically affects his hearing and therefore his ability to sing. His singing, however, is not the problem. The music trawls tepid, funkless territory. Whether teetotal rhythm & blues or squeaky clean jazz-funk, if ever a music was “lite”, this is it. They run the gamut from country to doo-wop (the latter on the supremely cheesy "Pretty Girls Everywhere"), the vanilla whiff of dinner party jazz occasionally present.
Weather’s tone and lyrics aim for upbeat fun, offering a septuagenarian last hurrah for country honkytonks, one night stands and, on “Remind Me Why I Love You Again”, unreconstructed male ponderings. The short of it is that it sounds like Huey Lewis and the News are having fun at their PG cert Middle American barbecue party, but the offer to join them isn’t tempting.
Below: Watch eight minute CBS Sunday Morning news piece about the return of Huey Lewis and the News and the problems they are facing
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Comments
Somewhere in the BBC archive
I recall this broadcast
It sounds like you were