Five years after the disappointing
The Magazine,
Rickie Lee Jones returned to form with
Flying Cowboys, which shared much of the playful, childlike charm of her debut,
Rickie Lee Jones, and some of the musically diffuse, lyrically ambitious form of its follow-up,
Pirates. From the opening track, "The Horses," which suggested a mother's delight with her child as much as a lover's devotion,
Jones reintroduced the joyous tone of her early work as well as establishing the Western theme that would run through the album -- cowboys, rodeos, horses, deserts -- without adding up to an actual storyline. The easy rhythms and lazy, flexible singing on the first few songs were reminiscent of
Laura Nyro's work with
Labelle on their
Gonna Take a Miracle album, after which
Jones branched out into reggae and folk-blues, coming up with an affectionate bluesman voice on "Ghost Train." "Satellites," the college radio hit, used the sprung rhythms and surprising choral parts familiar from her popular early songs. If
Jones could be obscure and unfocused as a writer, that weakness was also her strength, since it was an expression of the imagination that also produced her most striking musical effects. Producer
Walter Becker may have helped keep things from getting as grandiose as they had on
The Magazine, but it was really the artist herself who managed to rein in from that album's self-importance. If what resulted was not as accomplished as
Pirates, it was the most accessible and enjoyable music
Jones had made since her debut. ~ William Ruhlmann