RINALDI SINGS
What's It All About?
(Tangerine)
Rating: 5
US release date: 21 February 2005
UK release date: 7 March 2005
by Maura McAndrew

:. e-mail this article
:. print this article
:. comment on this article

Rinaldi Sings' Steve Rinaldi certainly knows what he's doing. From just a glance at the liner notes of What's It All About?, his debut solo album (he was a member of indie band the Moment for years), anyone can see his focus, his goal. Rinaldi wants to take the world by storm by bringing back the antithesis of the tiresome New York rock of now: that cheerful, brass-laden bubblegum Motown of the late '60s, with a hint of Tony Orlando/Tom Jones bravado thrown in. It's not cool, it's not careless, it's not dark, but it is, well, cheesy.

Rinaldi deserves credit for going against the grain, and has become a critical favorite in his home of England. But is that because it's a great album, or because the NME is simply sick of talking about the Libertines? I found myself really enjoying Rinaldi's smooth, charming delivery at the beginning of the album, with the highlight "Happy". "Happy" is a truly ridiculous bubblegum gem, all groovy horns and crooning. But though Rinaldi's voice is pleasant, his arrangements catchy, and his songs singable, after a few tracks it all gets to be a bit much.

The liner notes themselves demonstrate this: There's Rinaldi on a Vespa playing a trombone! And there he is superimposed into a 1960s "Top of the Pops" set! It's sort of funny, and like fellow Englishman Robbie Williams, Steve Rinaldi performs his songs with a constant ironic smirk. But where Williams was clever and self-effacing, Rinaldi gets too lost in his shtick to bother. For example, after "Happy" comes "On a Magic Carpet Ride", which just seems like a lazy attempt to poke fun at a tired cliché.

The songs on What's It All About?, though increasingly cloying, are insanely catchy, and Rinaldi deserves credit for making it look easy. Writing a catchy tune is hard, and to my surprise, after listening to the album only twice I was singing along without even knowing it. There's a mid-tempo break halfway through the album with gems such as the Britpop-sounding "You're Alive" and "Lucky Day", though perhaps I only like them because they are the two genre departures on the album. Rinaldi does better when he lays off the brass and uses his cuddly Damon Albarn vocals to reveal something more honest.

The rest of the album (labeled "side two", naturally), is smooth and poppy, but it's overkill. Hearing any one of these songs on the radio would make me happy, but listening to them all at once is like eating an entire bag of Oreos in one sitting: I feel weary and bloated, wondering what it was I ever liked about them. Perhaps Steve Rinaldi should take a cue from his 1960s predecessors and realize that a few 45s can go a long way. This blue-eyed crooner could conquer the singles market, but as it stands a whole album is sickly-sweet pop overload.

— 7 September 2005

TODAY ON POPMATTERS
Columns | recent
Rabble Without a Cause: I’ll Swap You Two Wydens for a Biden
The Screener: Women Without Men
Events | recent | archive
:. Dave Matthews Band + Ingrid Michaelson — 10.September.08: New York, NY

RECENT MUSIC
In bold are PopMatters Picks, the best in new music.
CD REVIEWS
Abe Duque
be your own PET
Big Sandy & His Fly-Rite Boys
The Bottle Rockets
The Brand New Heavies
Camille
Johnny Cash
Slaid Cleaves
Elvis Costello & Allen Toussaint
Cut Chemist
Dabrye
Miles Davis
Daedelus
Dinosaur Jr.
Dr. Octagon
Alejandro Escovedo
Fatboy Slim
Four Tet
The Handsome Family
Matthew Herbert
India.Arie
Ise Lyfe
Jefferson Airplane
Kaada
Keane
Lord Jamar
Mission of Burma
Mr. Lif
Mojave 3
Allison Moorer
Paul Oakenfold
Oneida
Grant-Lee Phillips
Priestess
The Procussions
Corinne Bailey Rae
Ramblin' Jack Elliott
Rhymefest
Julie Roberts
Diana Ross
7L & Esoteric
Alice Smith
Snow Patrol
Sonic Youth
Soul Asylum
Sound Team
Regina Spektor
Sufjan Stevens
Matthew Sweet
Vetiver
Rhonda Vincent
Wa-Zimba
Thom Yorke

EVENT REVIEWS
Baby Dayliner
The BellRays
Brookville
Cat Power
The Clientele + Great Lakes
The Coup + T-Kash
Mike Doughty Band
Download Festival 2006
Fiery Furnaces + Man Man
The Futureheads
The Handsome Family
High Sierra Music Festival
Billy Idol
Joi
Bettye Lavette
Love Parade
Nine Inch Nails + Bauhaus
Pretenders
Sonic Youth
Splendour in the Grass 2006
The Streets
Sunset Rubdown

 
advertising | about | contributors | submissions
© 1999-2008 PopMatters.com. All rights reserved.
PopMatters.com™ and PopMatters™ are trademarks of PopMatters Media, Inc. and PopMatters Magazine.