Love was the third album Roddy Frame recorded as Aztec Camera. If--and this is an "if" so big that most would be reluctant to scale it without sherpas, yaks and oxygen--Roddy Frame’s career has been characterised by anything, it has been a determination to do, at any given moment, roughly the last thing that was expected of him. Having already done the ragged acoustic troubadour (
High Land, Hard Rain) and prematurely aged balladeer (
Knife) bits while still in his teens, Frame relocated to New York for
Love and made as pristine an album of Philadelphia soul as could reasonably be expected from a Clash fan from East Kilbride.
Love is largely remembered for Aztec Camera’s biggest hit--the exuberant "Somewhere in my Heart", in which Frame pronounced, against a backdrop of immaculate studio sheen, that "The closest thing to heaven is to rock and roll"--but deserves better. The dizzy Motown pastiche "Deep and Wide and Tall", and "More Than a Law" are both as good as Roddy Frame gets praise indeed and the closing track, the rueful lament "Killermont Street", sets a surely unbeatable standard in the hitherto under-subscribed category of great songs about bus stations. --Andrew Mueller