Namedrops keep falling on his head, so itโ€™s a wonder Lloyd Cole never found time to give Pauline Kael a cameo in the pomo-boho tangles of jangle and allusion that make up this 1984 debut. Because when she nailed Citizen Kane as a โ€œshallow masterpieceโ€, she could have been describing a tune like โ€œPerfect Skinโ€, all โ€œcheekbones like geometry and eyes like sinโ€, where the moral of the song is that โ€œthere never has been oneโ€.

Maybe it was the turtlenecks, the 2CVs and basement flats, or maybe it was just the drabbest artwork in album sleeve history, but, in their time, the Commotions never really escaped the dowdy dorm rooms of the mid-โ€™80s. Happily, at 20 years remove, Rattlesnakes sounds fresh and funny?wittily ambitious rather than earnest or gauche. Coleโ€™s was an old-fashioned kind of New Pop-the knock-kneed beatnikery of early Postcard buffed up for drivetime and scored for cinemascope. For a record so keen with wordy pleasures, Rattlesnakes has a rare sumptuousness: in the scorched guitar rising through โ€œForest Fireโ€, the swampy undertow of โ€œSpeedboatโ€, or the strings that swoop and soar alongside the Joan Didion highway of the title track.

Advertisement

But the heart of the record lies in Coleโ€™s conceits. These songs know little of life beyond Penguin Modern Classics, repertory cinema and a musical Manhattan of the mind, but, like a young Tarantino, they find much fun within their fictive confines?โ€You came driving back to town in a beat-up Grace Kelly carl Looking like a friend of Truman Capote but looking exactly like you areโ€. All the worldโ€™s a sound-stage.

The additional disc of demos and rarities shows a little too much of the working at times: a cover of Televisionโ€™s โ€œGloryโ€ and the line in โ€œBeautiful Cityโ€ remembering โ€œDancing round your flat/To โ€˜Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat'โ€ rather gives the game away. But if talent borrows and genius steals, then Rattlesnakes remains a delirious swagbag, ripe for reappraisal.