By all means a phenomenal pop album that hit number nine on the black albums chart and crossed over to penetrate the pop charts at number 32,
Nightclubbing saw
Grace Jones working once again with
Sly Dunbar,
Robbie Shakespeare, and the remainder of the Compass Point team.
Nightclubbing also continues
Jones' tradition of picking excellent songs to reinterpret. This time out,
the Police's "Demolition Man,"
Bill Withers' "Use Me," and
Iggy Pop's "Nightclubbing" receive radical reinterpretations; "Nightclubbing" is glacial in both tempo and lack of warmth, while both "Use Me" and "Demolition Man" fit perfectly into
Jones' lyrical scheme. Speaking of a lyrical scheme, "Pull Up to the Bumper" (number five black singles, number two club play) is so riddled with naughty double entendres -- or is it just about parallel parking? -- that it renders
Musique's "In the Bush" as daring as
Paul Anka's "Puppy Love." Drive it in between what,
Grace? It's not just lyrics that make the song stick out; jingling spirals of rhythm guitar and a simplistic, squelching, mid-tempo rhythm make the song effective, even without considering
Jones' presence.
Sly & Robbie provide ideal backdrops for
Jones yet again, casting a brisk but not bristly sheen over buoyant structures. Never before and never since has a precisely chipped block of ore been so seductive. ~ Andy Kellman