Pop Music
Jezebel: Teen Romance With Jay Aston
By Jean Rosenbluth
LA Times 19th Nov. 1990
During the past few years, Gene Loves Jezebel has devolved from a modestly
hip, nominally sophisticated alternative-rock band into the glam-rock group
of choice for junior high-school girls who smoke cigarettes in the restroom.
Which is not necessarily to say that GLJ has gotten worse – merely more
populist.
At the Universal Amphitheatre on Saturday, lead singer Jay Aston showed
he knows how to please a crowd. Making his first local appearance with
the British band since his twin brother Michael left the group. Aston stepped
eagerly into the spotlight, rubbing his chest and playing with his fly
to the delight of thousands of screaming young females.
Though he could have used some help with his singing from Milli Vanilli’s
technicians, he glided gamely through Gene Loves Jezebel’s impressive catalogue
of shoulda-been hits, from the erotic “Motion of Love” to the palpitating
“Desire,” to the pretty “Tangled Up in You” from the new album “Kiss of
Life.” By the time Michael Aston joined his former bandmates for an encore
of “Heartache,” he was no longer missed. Los Angeles loves Jay.
The second-billed Special Beat, a sort of ska supergroup, kept the audience
on its feet for an hour with burbling renditions of some genre classics,
but it had little new of interest to offer. Seattle’s Posies opened the
show with a palette of scruffy pop that falls somewhere between the Raspberries
and the Replacements – in other words, practically perfect.
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