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Paolo Nutini - 'Coming Up Easy'

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Fraser McAlpine | 15:35 UK time, Monday, 3 August 2009

Paolo Nutini

Of all the musical surprises which have happened in 2009, the en-good-ification of Paolo Nutini is the one that no-one could have predicted. Not even his most ardent fans. In making his comeback album 'Sunny Side Up' sound like a brilliant collection of some of the best musical ideas of the last 500 years - from folky flutes to Jungle Book jazz to jumpy ska - all delivered in a witchy Scots crone voice, he's jumped over all the other moany old singer-songwriters queueing up to let the world hear their timid thoughts in their weedy squeaks, and nabbed a well-deserved No.1 album into the bargain.

What's more, people are talking about this record, and recommending it, and passing it along, in a way that all record companies DREAM of. Dad's birthday present has never been so easy, and for once, the same goes for the entire family, from elder/younger siblings to groovy uncles, grans and grandads to pre-nage jitterkids. So long as you can get past the old lady voice, great treasures await you.

This, while a nice song, is not one of the most precious treasures. Which makes it an odd choice for a single.

(. Bad bunny! In your hutch!)

The trouble is, the one thing Paolo should have maybe stopped himself from doing is the painstaking recreation of that big Jools Holland-approved '60s soul sound. Y'know, like in The Commitments. He's got the voice for it, he clearly knows the turf well enough to pen a decent ditty in that style, but compared to the giddy fun of 'Pencil Full Of Lead', or the spiralling South American folk-gospel of 'High Hopes', 'Coming Up Easy' just sounds too reverential to the past. Too obvious.

Everything from the purring Hammond organ to the busy bassline, from the staccato guitars to the chirruping brass, says "this is the proper way to do it", as if music is some kind of jigsaw puzzle. When actually, the reason the rest of the album flies like it does is that some of the edge pieces - edge pieces from entirely different puzzles, I might add - are in the middle, in a beautifully-arranged jumble.

Even the fadeout, where Paolo wails "it was in love I was created and in love is how I hope I die" over and over, is held back slightly by the idea that he's attempting to keep a musical seat warm while the person who owns it - Otis Redding, perhaps - has nipped to the loo. And while we are all used to hearing this kind of hero worship on modern records (Mr Ronson! So nice to see you), it's not the way you should go about advertising that you've recorded a great album which - mostly - does not do this.

Three starsDownload: Out now
CD Released: August 10th

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(Fraser McAlpine)

Comments

  • Comment number 1.

    i went to see young paolo in camden just before the album came out, so i'd only heard snippets of the new stuff and i was totally blown away, i thought it was all amazing.

    When the album came out, i was really happy at the success but sad that some reviews criticised the album for being a mix of too many genres and having no direction. a critisim which has been put on other aritsts and really annoys me... what is wrong with having a mixed bag of an album?? we dont all like just one genre of music to listen to, and artists in turn are influenced by many different artists - which is evident in paolo's fantastic album.

    an album which is made all the more better when you've seen the tracks live, which is what sold it for me. I love 'Coming up Easy' - it starts off so simple and the end lines which you speak of are my favourite bit, the power and emotion of them i adore...

    however, yes, if we wanted another song to go "wham bam THIS is why it's a number one album" there were probably better songs...

    this album makes me happy, and seeing paolo live is even better, hes so happy and positive and it makes for a great show!

    the video however is slightly disturbing. "what are you doing in that stupid man suit"?

    i'll shut up now.

  • Comment number 2.

    I really like Paolo Nutini's music, and I love the fact that 'Sunny Side Up' has a lot of variation, something which some artists (Akon, Akon and Akon) should take note off. It gets you to #1 anyway, you can't argue with it. I also like the fact that he's turned his back on his previous look and stopped his record label trying to appeal to certain markets. The music speaks more than his videos and face do now.
    This song's not my favourite, a fair review, but that's not my issue. It's his voice. It's changed and it doesn't sound natural. I don't believe he sings like that at all, and it especially shows up live. On 'These Streets' it didn't sound like he was straining that much, then I heard 'Candy' and it sounds like he's wringing his voicebox dry with effort when it's a simple song to sing. The rest of the album continues in the same vein. Paolo, you're great, but sort it out mon.

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