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Beth Lee - Hardly Matters (2024)

Beth Lee - Hardly Matters (2024)

BAND/ARTIST: Beth Lee

Tracklist:

01. Another Day (2:53)
02. Blue Skies (2:28)
03. Call Me Anymore (3:55)
04. Rough (3:15)
05. I've Tried (3:23)
06. Blue Valentine (4:08)
07. Only You (3:50)
08. Hardly Matters (3:10)
09. Losing My Disguise (4:13)
10. Wall (2:40)
11. Umbrella (3:53)

This outing touches upon the female pop-rockers that inhabited the charts throughout the 60s. But instead of sounding retro 60s Beth Lee (vocals/guitar) wisely adds the edge of the new wavers who injected lots of life into the old recipes. There’s more Blondie (Debbie Harry) than Shangri-Las (Mary Weiss), more Bette Bright (Deaf School) than Lesley Gore & a touch of The Castaways (“Liar, Liar”) edginess.

But the expertise laid out here is so finely spread that Beth Lee manages to make it all sound fresh & new. Her 11 painful & hopeful, sassy & aggressive melodic & flexible tunes on Hardly Matters.

Produced by Vicente Rodriguez (drums/guitar/percussion/keys/bgv) the songs on this album certainly subscribe to the summer hit stylizations of Robin Ward (“Wonderful Summer”) & Leslie Gore’s “That’s The Way Boys Are.” Beth pulls it off with the same vocal sweetness & power that has a tinge of a suave invective. “Call Me Anymore” is pop with a Gore caress on one cheek & slap on the other.

If Beth Lee’s voice was a little more New York City pungent like Patti Smith “Rough” would be such an excellent modern-day Shangri-La pop-harpoon. But as is, it has lots of bluster…it’s just sung a little too politely.

Despite all the New York references, Beth Lee is originally from Houston. Go figure. But there are lots of great blues singers in Europe too which is a contrast. Music is universal now. I like the way she interprets this kind of music. She’s a natural. Even with the balladry of “I’ve Tried,” she has a cool delivery & a sincere one. It’s a little more juvenile but has a Robin Ward near-tearful tone.

The majority of the original songs all have the necessary hooks to be hit fodder (definitely in the ’60s) but today it would still be a hit-and-miss. The charts are a fickle measurement. The music has the catchiness that is ear-candy & Beth’s songs are exhilarating.

I’d like to hear Beth cover an old Little Eva song – “Keep Your Hands Off My Baby” because I think she has the voice to resurrect that great forgotten rocker. But Beth being Beth surfaces on the excellent “Losing My Disguise.” This is bracingly smart music. A meticulous pop tune that’s well-arranged & wonderfully sung. When Beth needs to rock out with themes of anxiety & worn-out situations — she adds enough hope to clothe a naked heart.


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