Hooking up with 4AD wasn't the only new move
Berry made with
Love. She also recruited a wide number of musicians to help her flesh out her songs. Christopher Berry again played guitar on most of the tracks; avant-garde saxophonist
Lol Coxhill popped up here and there; cellists
Martin McCarrick and
Audrey Riley similarly stepped in; and Levitation members
Terry Bickers and
Laurence O'Keefe guested on guitar and bass, respectively. Meanwhile,
Berry didn't return to the straightforward pop/rock of Firefly, instead letting the ghostly arrangements of Below the Waves be her guide. Peter Walsh worked behind the boards as engineer, though it sounds like
Berry clearly had final say regarding the album's production. A singular example of
Berry's talent is her radical reworking of
Bob Mould's
Hüsker Dü nugget "Up in the Air," which is transformed here into a serene, beautiful reflection on regret; Coxhill's soft sax contributions quietly add to the haunting beauty of the performance. Everything else is written by
Berry and performed with the soothing beauty with which she made her name. The one exception is "Cradle," co-written with O'Keefe and featuring only him on heavily produced fretless bass; her overdubbed vocals and the low rings of his bass notes make for a truly affecting song. At points,
Berry incorporates a low-key groove into the proceedings, courtesy of percussionist
Hossam Ramzy. His work on "Washington Square" and the quietly addictive "Silver Buttons" nicely balances the evanescence of the other tracks. It all concludes with the gorgeous lament "Lily," on which Coxhill's soprano sax and O'Keefe's bass provide elegant support. ~ Ned Raggett