Scott Walker's success as a teen idol singer of Spectorish ballads with
the Walker Brothers in no way prepared listeners for the mordant, despairing lyrics of his solo debut. To compound the surprise, he does his best to imitate the vocal girth of
Tony Bennett and
Frank Sinatra on this mix of original tunes and covers, which also features sweeping, bloated orchestral arrangements. It was hardly rock, and pop of a most oddball sort, but it found a surprisingly large audience -- in Britain, anyway, where it reached the Top Three in 1967. Poke behind the velvet curtain of the languid MOR arrangements, and one finds a surprisingly literate existentialist at the helm of these proceedings. His lyrical nuances were probably lost on his audience of predominately teenage girls, though they've earned him a small cult audience that endures to this day. Besides presenting three of his own compositions,
Walker covers tunes by
Weill/
Mann,
Tim Hardin, and
Andre & Dory Previn on this album, as well as three songs by his favorite writer,
Jacques Brel. Highlights include his exquisitely anguished rendition of
Brel's classic "Amsterdam" and his dramatic cover of the early-'60s
Toni Fisher pop ballad "The Big Hurt."