Qobuz Store wallpaper
Categories:
Cart 0

Your cart is empty

The Pretty Things|Cross Talk

Cross Talk

The Pretty Things

Available in
16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo

Unlimited Streaming

Listen to this album in high quality now on our apps

Start my trial period and start listening to this album

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Subscribe

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Digital Download

Purchase and download this album in a wide variety of formats depending on your needs.

Who would have thought it? Reunited after splitting in the mid-'70s, the Pretty Things return with a new wave album. It's not what anyone might have expected, but it's very far from a disaster. The stop-on-a-dime arrangements and natural power show them to be well-seasoned, and Phil May, with an extremely mannered voice, comes across as a taunting frontman. In fact, you tend to feel that if Thin Lizzy had eased up on the metal, they might have made an album very much like this -- great, catchy songs based in R&B and old rock & roll ("Lost That Girl") -- but with the tongue firmly in cheek (check the Sting imitation on "No Future") while pandering to fashion. But when the results are as good as the jangly "Office Love" or "I'm Calling," you really don't care where the tongue's residing. There's a sense of history about the '50s drums on "Falling Again" that no young bucks could ever match, nor could they come close to the band's overall professionalism or stinging guitar work of Peter Tolson. Any of these ten tracks would have made a great single and by rights should have returned the band to major-name status. But justice is thin on the ground in music and instead it became one of the lost Pretties albums -- a shame, since in its own lighter way, it's every bit as good as their classic albums of a decade earlier. Some reunions don't work; this one just roars.

© Chris Nickson /TiVo

More info

Cross Talk

The Pretty Things

launch qobuz app I already downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS Open

download qobuz app I have not downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS yet Download the Qobuz app

You are currently listening to samples.

Listen to over 100 million songs with an unlimited streaming plan.

Listen to this playlist and more than 100 million songs with our unlimited streaming plans.

From £10.83/month

1
I'm Calling
00:04:06

Jon Astley, Producer - Phil Chapman, Producer - The Pretty Things, MainArtist - Dick Taylor, Guitar - Wally Waller, Guitar, Vocals, Bass - Phil May, Vocals, Writer - John Povey, Keyboards, Vocals - Skip Alan, Drums - Peter Tolson, Writer, Lead Guitar

© 1980 Warner Records Inc. ℗ 1980 Warner Records Inc.

2
Edge of the Night
00:03:19

Jon Astley, Producer - Phil Chapman, Producer - The Pretty Things, MainArtist - Dick Taylor, Guitar - Wally Waller, Guitar, Vocals, Writer, Bass - Phil May, Vocals, Writer - John Povey, Keyboards, Vocals - Skip Alan, Drums - Peter Tolson, Lead Guitar

© 1980 Warner Records Inc. ℗ 1980 Warner Records Inc.

3
Sea of Blue
00:03:13

Jon Astley, Producer - Phil Chapman, Producer - The Pretty Things, MainArtist - Dick Taylor, Guitar - Wally Waller, Guitar, Vocals, Bass - Phil May, Vocals, Writer - John Povey, Keyboards, Vocals - Skip Alan, Drums - Peter Tolson, Writer, Lead Guitar

© 1980 Warner Records Inc. ℗ 1980 Warner Records Inc.

4
Lost That Girl
00:02:50

Jon Astley, Producer - Phil Chapman, Producer - The Pretty Things, MainArtist - Dick Taylor, Guitar - Wally Waller, Guitar, Vocals, Bass - Phil May, Vocals, Writer - John Povey, Keyboards, Vocals - Skip Alan, Drums - Peter Tolson, Lead Guitar

© 1980 Warner Records Inc. ℗ 1980 Warner Records Inc.

5
Bitter End
00:03:16

Jon Astley, Producer - Phil Chapman, Producer - The Pretty Things, MainArtist - Dick Taylor, Guitar - Wally Waller, Guitar, Vocals, Bass - Phil May, Vocals, Writer - John Povey, Keyboards, Vocals, Writer - Skip Alan, Drums - Peter Tolson, Lead Guitar

© 1980 Warner Records Inc. ℗ 1980 Warner Records Inc.

6
Office Love
00:04:12

Jon Astley, Producer - Phil Chapman, Producer - The Pretty Things, MainArtist - Dick Taylor, Guitar - Wally Waller, Guitar, Vocals, Bass - Phil May, Vocals, Writer - John Povey, Keyboards, Vocals - Skip Alan, Drums - Peter Tolson, Writer, Lead Guitar

© 1980 Warner Records Inc. ℗ 1980 Warner Records Inc.

7
Falling Again
00:03:20

Jon Astley, Producer - Phil Chapman, Producer - The Pretty Things, MainArtist - Dick Taylor, Guitar - Wally Waller, Guitar, Vocals, Writer, Bass - Phil May, Vocals, Writer - John Povey, Keyboards, Vocals - Skip Alan, Drums - Peter Tolson, Lead Guitar

© 1980 Warner Records Inc. ℗ 1980 Warner Records Inc.

8
It's So Hard
00:03:14

Jon Astley, Producer - Phil Chapman, Producer - The Pretty Things, MainArtist - Dick Taylor, Guitar - Wally Waller, Guitar, Vocals, Bass - Phil May, Vocals, Writer - John Povey, Keyboards, Vocals - Skip Alan, Drums - Peter Tolson, Writer, Lead Guitar

© 1980 Warner Records Inc. ℗ 1980 Warner Records Inc.

9
She Don't
00:04:08

Jon Astley, Producer - Phil Chapman, Producer - The Pretty Things, MainArtist - Dick Taylor, Guitar - Wally Waller, Guitar, Vocals, Bass - Phil May, Vocals, Writer - John Povey, Keyboards, Vocals - Skip Alan, Drums - Peter Tolson, Writer, Lead Guitar

© 1980 Warner Records Inc. ℗ 1980 Warner Records Inc.

10
No Future
00:04:28

Jon Astley, Producer - Phil Chapman, Producer - The Pretty Things, MainArtist - Dick Taylor, Guitar - Wally Waller, Guitar, Vocals, Bass - Phil May, Vocals, Writer - John Povey, Keyboards, Vocals - Skip Alan, Drums - Peter Tolson, Writer, Lead Guitar

© 1980 Warner Records Inc. ℗ 1980 Warner Records Inc.

Album review

Who would have thought it? Reunited after splitting in the mid-'70s, the Pretty Things return with a new wave album. It's not what anyone might have expected, but it's very far from a disaster. The stop-on-a-dime arrangements and natural power show them to be well-seasoned, and Phil May, with an extremely mannered voice, comes across as a taunting frontman. In fact, you tend to feel that if Thin Lizzy had eased up on the metal, they might have made an album very much like this -- great, catchy songs based in R&B and old rock & roll ("Lost That Girl") -- but with the tongue firmly in cheek (check the Sting imitation on "No Future") while pandering to fashion. But when the results are as good as the jangly "Office Love" or "I'm Calling," you really don't care where the tongue's residing. There's a sense of history about the '50s drums on "Falling Again" that no young bucks could ever match, nor could they come close to the band's overall professionalism or stinging guitar work of Peter Tolson. Any of these ten tracks would have made a great single and by rights should have returned the band to major-name status. But justice is thin on the ground in music and instead it became one of the lost Pretties albums -- a shame, since in its own lighter way, it's every bit as good as their classic albums of a decade earlier. Some reunions don't work; this one just roars.

© Chris Nickson /TiVo

About the album

Improve album information

Qobuz logo Why buy on Qobuz...

On sale now...

Money For Nothing

Dire Straits

Money For Nothing Dire Straits

The Studio Albums 2009 – 2018

Mark Knopfler

Blue Train

John Coltrane

Blue Train John Coltrane

Live 1978 - 1992

Dire Straits

Live 1978 - 1992 Dire Straits
More on Qobuz
By The Pretty Things

Bare as Bone, Bright as Blood

The Pretty Things

Bare as Bone, Bright as Blood The Pretty Things

Rock St. Trop

The Pretty Things

Rock St. Trop The Pretty Things

S.F. Sorrow

The Pretty Things

S.F. Sorrow The Pretty Things

Parachute

The Pretty Things

Parachute The Pretty Things

BBC Seventies (Live)

The Pretty Things

BBC Seventies (Live) The Pretty Things

Playlists

You may also like...

One Deep River

Mark Knopfler

One Deep River Mark Knopfler

i/o

Peter Gabriel

i/o Peter Gabriel

Now And Then

The Beatles

Now And Then The Beatles

Rumours

Fleetwood Mac

Rumours Fleetwood Mac

Dark Matter

Pearl Jam

Dark Matter Pearl Jam