The Lilac Time “Paradise Circus”
/Staying in a cabin in the “North Woods”—no TV or internet—just 50 pounds of venison jerky, an old hi-fi, and a water-damaged box of records—they play fine. This one looks intriguing—never heard of The Lilac Time! Canadian? No. PolyGram, 1989. That singer sounds familiar! No band credits on the back cover, however—just egomaniac producer credits. The band could be any number if interchangeable Eighties Nineties competent pop combos—but who is that singer? I know I’ve heard him—maybe from another band? Moonlighting? Could it be… Robyn Hitchcock? After all, he was in the Soft Boys and the Egyptians—could The Lilac Time be another? Toning it down a little? No? Maybe that guy from Coldplay, but before Coldplay? No wait… I think it could be Mick Jagger. He did a lot of solo records—why not this one?—the codeword for “not with the Stones” is… Lilac Time. But that’s just crazy. Then it comes to me… Emeril Lagasse? I don’t even know who that is. The out-of-focus cover shows four guys, presumably in the band (and I’m making assumptions on the gender, based on posture as much as anything). It’s so out of focus that one is led to believe it was the photographer’s intention! The back cover lists song titles, producer credits, and an overlapping group of entirely uninspiring photos (it makes me think this record also came out on CD because this looks like the kind of random group of photos that made the entire history of the CD booklet not even worth preserving). I finally drive into town and pay some sketchy peckerwood $10 to use his internet. Not Hitchcock, but I knew that. Not even Alfred Hitchcock. Neither Jagger nor Lagasse. It’s some guy I never heard of, and I forgot to write it down! Musically, a bit of variety as well. The song “Paradise Circus” is an accordion instrumental—they’re stretching out! The next song has a “zydeco” influence and is pretty nice… for a bit, anyway. Guess what? The Lilac Time are still together! This was their second LP, and they’ve come out with ten more on nearly as many labels. And there are some nice pop songs popping out on this one, but some of these songs are lukewarm bummers, and it’s CD-era-endless.
4.25.25