
Yet Nick Hornby—the music-loving novelist responsible for High Fidelity and About a Boy—wrote all the lyrics for Lonely Avenue, which Folds then transformed into an 11-song collection.
The upbeat pop tunes jump to life like a room of bouncy balls. “Working Day” reflects the emotional highs and lows of one day of work in less than two minutes. “Levi Johnston’s Blues,” a song about Bristol Palin’s boyfriend, comes a little too late to be timely; nonetheless, it hilariously interprets Johnson’s point of view. As Folds haphazardly chugs on a stuttered drumbeat and bluntly yelps, “I’m a fuckin’ redneck, I live to hang out with the boys/Play some hockey, do some fishing, kill some moose,” Hornby’s mixed sympathy and mockery of the teenage boy charms.
Still, most of Lonely Avenue is a collection of swelling ballads that heave like a hefty cry, further enhanced with string arrangements by Paul Buckmaster. “Picture Window,” “Claire’s Ninth,” and “Belinda” are intimate narratives a sick child, the damage of divorce, and life of a one hit wonder. The latter is not something Folds or Hornby will ever have to worry about, and while Lonely Avenue isn’t a crowning glory for either, it is yet another inspired work to add to their collection.
Dude, thanks for writing this ! I have to check this out.
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