"The Harsh Truth of the Camera Eye" and "King Leer" sparkle with the almost over-the-top song structures and images characteristic of the Smiths' best work. What
Kill Uncle lacks is the musical coherence, let alone the stick-in-your-head charisma, that would lend the album the consistency of the singer's previous work. From the pleasant pop of "Our Frank" to the lazy crawl of "Asian Rut" or the pound of "Found Found Found," it plays more like a fragmented collection of polished studio outtakes than a finished album. After a choppy compilation of British singles and B sides from Morrissey last year (
Bona Drag), that detached feel is particularly disappointing.
Ironically, disappointment is an integral component of Morrissey's work it should, however, derive from the mood of each song's lyrics instead of from listeners' reactions. (RS 611)
RACHEL FELDER