Though a compilation of albums for America rather than a proper release,
Special View could almost be a greatest hits of sorts, capturing the unexpected and underrated talents of
Perrett and his bandmates for a late-'70s audience well enough and still holding up in later years. It doesn't hurt that the band's deathless anthem "Another Girl, Another Planet" -- as perfect a crystallization of power pop shot through with fractured melancholia instead of macho strut as could be imagined -- leads everything off.
Perrett's wounded but right voice --
Pete Shelley and
Richard Hell in perfect sync -- and the sharp, inspired melody and arrangement were reason enough for the band to exist, but
Special View provides a fair amount of others. The
Velvet Underground's influence (and, to an extent, the
Modern Lovers') on the group could easily be heard on "Lovers of Today," the defiantly simple scrabble of those bands informed with the seasoned semi-pub/glam roots of the performers to result in an enjoyable tension.
Perrett's gift at turning the seen-it-all stance of
Lou Reed into a suddenly romantic, almost naïvely sweet vision definitely calls
Jonathan Richman to mind, but he's less winsome and a touch more haunted and on edge, a careful balance that often is the most remarkable thing about the band in general. The strong enough but generally unremarkable R&B rave-ups on songs like "City of Fun" wouldn't have been so listenable without his wounded drawl. Meanwhile, moments like the conclusion of "The Beast," with its semi-epic guitar solo, and the synth on "Someone Who Cares" show examples of true inspiration. Secret highlight: "The Whole of the Law," a bit of a '50s tearjerker with the addition of the sax. ~ Ned Raggett