Beth Lee

REVIEW: Beth Lee “Hardly Matters”

Reviews

Beth Lee – Hardly Matters

This outing touches upon the female pop-rockers that inhabited the charts throughout the 60s. But instead of sounding retro 60s Beth Lee (vocals/guitar) wisely adds the edge of the new wavers who injected lots of life into the old recipes. There’s more Blondie (Debbie Harry) than Shangri-Las (Mary Weiss), more Bette Bright (Deaf School) than Lesley Gore & a touch of The Castaways (“Liar, Liar”) edginess.

But the expertise laid out here is so finely spread that Beth Lee manages to make it all sound fresh & new. Her 11 painful & hopeful, sassy & aggressive melodic & flexible tunes on Hardly Matters (Drops Oct 25/Independent/37:54).

Produced by Vicente Rodriguez (drums/guitar/percussion/keys/bgv) the songs on this album certainly subscribe to the summer hit stylizations of Robin Ward (“Wonderful Summer”) & Leslie Gore’s “That’s The Way Boys Are.” Beth pulls it off with the same vocal sweetness & power that has a tinge of a suave invective. “Call Me Anymore” is pop with a Gore caress on one cheek & slap on the other.

If Beth Lee’s voice was a little more New York City pungent like Patti Smith “Rough” would be such an excellent modern-day Shangri-La pop-harpoon. But as is, it has lots of bluster…it’s just sung a little too politely.

Beth Lee

Despite all the New York references, Beth Lee is originally from Houston. Go figure. But there are lots of great blues singers in Europe too which is a contrast. Music is universal now. I like the way she interprets this kind of music. She’s a natural. Even with the balladry of “I’ve Tried,” she has a cool delivery & a sincere one. It’s a little more juvenile but has a Robin Ward near-tearful tone.

The majority of the original songs all have the necessary hooks to be hit fodder (definitely in the ’60s) but today it would still be a hit-and-miss. The charts are a fickle measurement. The music has the catchiness that is ear-candy & Beth’s songs are exhilarating.

I’d like to hear Beth cover an old Little Eva song – “Keep Your Hands Off My Baby” because I think she has the voice to resurrect that great forgotten rocker. But Beth being Beth surfaces on the excellent “Losing My Disguise.” This is bracingly smart music. A meticulous pop tune that’s well-arranged & wonderfully sung. When Beth needs to rock out with themes of anxiety & worn-out situations — she adds enough hope to clothe a naked heart.

Highlights – “Another Day,” “Blue Skies,” “Call Me Anymore,” “Rough,” “I’ve Tried,” “Hardly Matters,” “Losing My Disguise” & “Wall.”

Musicians – James DePrato (guitar/bass), Jessica Will (bass on “Wall”) & Jorge Castillo (guitar/bgv on “Wall”).

CD photo courtesy of Eryn Brooke. Portrait courtesy of Beth Lee’s Spotify. CD @ Bandcamp + https://www.bethlee.net/ & https://www.missjillpr.com/2381-2/

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