
The following comments were excerpted from articles written by Vincent Fumar, former music writer for the New Orleans Times-Picayune newspaper.
"You" backed with
"Three Cord City" is the Cold's first single. Both songs are DeGeneres/Radecker
compositions that have sharply defined rhythms, catchy melodies, and memorable lyrics.
"You" opens with a brisk Chris Luckette drumbeat that leads into Barbara
Menendez, using her patented girl-pop voice, singing with a clarity and verve that recalls
the early Blondie albums. Radecker sings the lead on "Three Cord City" using his
best adolescent-sounding tone, and Luckette furiously hammers one of his favorite surf
beats. Both songs feature a lack of present-day studio trappings, and a snap that puts 90
percent of today's radio fare to shame.
(Aug 1980)
The Cold's stirring beat material,
all of it done with jovial slants, is exemplified by a scorching version of
"Downtown", featuring a frenetic Menendez vocal and a thrilling extra beat from
Luckette during the chorus. From the impressive push and pull of "I'm Serious"
to the intrigue of new songs like "Mesmerized", the Cold has once again eschewed
the fulsome lead guitar and synthesized drudgery that plagued lesser bands... Effervescent
ensemble work has become the band's trademark.
(Dec 1980)
"Mesmerized" ambles and
jaunts across so many rhythmic changes that it becomes impossible not to be grabbed by
some part of it. It is more than the customary Cold balance of walloping beat and catchy
melody. There is the stern bass might of Vance DeGeneres, the ticking of the Kevin
Radecker - Bert Smith guitar team, and a stylish Barbara Menendez vocal.
The B-side, "Wake Up" by drummer Chris Luckette, is every bit as good as
"Mesmerized". It continues the snap and crackle of the A-side with Luckette's
boyish though impassioned vocal, which contrasts with the tight guitars of Radecker and
Smith, those appropriately austere stylists who continue to pick each other's pockets. The
tempo is faster, with Luckette mounting his usual tom-drum attacks in the right places,
and singing his heart out. Produced by DeGeneres and Cold sound man Cliff Derbins, the
record is a perfect example of pop with a vengence.
(Mar 1981)
"Thanks a Lot" is sung by
Bert Smith, who makes his first appearance on records as a lead vocalist. The song offers
a quirky introduction outlined by the guitars and organ, then returns to the theme in
several spots. The delivery of the lyrics, a tale of soured romance and attempted suicide,
is tense and sometimes desperate; there is an appropriate bitterness in the way the lyrics
are spat out. "Thanks a Lot" uses much precise imagery, is attractive in a
neurotic sense and still manages to rock mightily.
(Aug 1981)
Their fourth single "Do the
Dance" / "Missing Hit Man" was produced by Craig Leon, who engineered the
first Blondie album and produced the Ramone's first LP. "Do the Dance" has the
appeal of a nursery rhyme and the vivacity of an old cartoon. Chris Luckette's polished
drum sound can't be overlooked, since Leon apparently went to considerable lengths to
capture its full range. The simplicity implied by the chant, sung by Luckette and Barbara
Menendez, is typically deceptive.
"Missing Hit Man" seems to have been musically inspired by the tremelo-heavy
soundtracks of mid-60's spy movies, and lyrically inspired by Raymond Chandler's detective
novels. Radecker sings on lead on what may be the densest Cold sound yet recorded.
(Apr 1982)
The 16 Songs... album includes the
endearingly Squeeze-like "Working Girl", the well-sung "Modern Beat",
and the diffuse but passionate girl-pop of "Seems Like Forever". Bert Smith's
terse, literary songwriting style is featured in "Russian Around", (with some
offbeat international political references.
(Mar 1984)
"Take All the Time" is a
basic medium-tempo tale of romantic complication, sung fetchingly by Barbara Menendez and
underlined by the firmest instrumental sound the band has ever mustered in a studio.
Vocals aside, the song is somewhat reminiscent of those 1960's rock revivalists, the
Flamin' Groovies.
"I Go To Pieces" is a reorganized version of the Peter and Gordon hit, with the
chords broken up a bit and emphasized in a riff-happy manner. Menendez's vocal features
more of her tension-and-release delivery, and Chris Luckette's drums again boom memorably.
(Dec 1984)
The Major Minor LP was recorded in
Slidell and remixed in Los Angeles by Dan Van Patten. Van Patten produced Berlin's
Pleasure Victim album, and has also worked with Big Country and Nicky Chinn.
The songs, some new and some familiar, offer the sound of an uncorrupted band. Among Cold
staples, "Girls Never Know" has a big drum sound, while the old Lesley Gore hit
"That's the Way Boys Are" is lustily sung by Barbara Menendez.
Melody meets the big beat on "What Went Wrong Today", which is about as baroque
a production as one could imagine the Cold attempting. "Let's Flip", a
Radecker-Menendez duet, sounds more than a bit like Tracey Ullman fare, but with a very
apppealing guitar-keyboard interlude, beefy drumming, and a wonderfully devious melodic
course.
As pop revisionists, the Cold continues to earn kudos. Such is the case with their
aggressive reworking of a Smokey Robinson song "I Dont Blame You at All".
Robinson wrote and sang the original version in the verbose, breathless style of his
"Tears of a Clown". The Cold's version is done at a furious pace, with staccato
verses broken only by dramatic full stops, and its hard to imagine more action being
packed into two minutes and 20 seconds.
Major Minor is the work of a still unspoiled rock band whose original ideals remain
seemingly unaffected by exposure or routine. One still hears musical freshness, deft
execution, and a hint of untapped resources.
Still, given the Cold's on-and-off history, perhaps it wasn't surprising when Menendez
walked into a soundcheck at Jimmy's last May [1985] and informed the other members that
that night's show would be her last with the Cold. Thus, it seems the Major Minor album
will be the last recording we'll hear from New Orleans' favorite pop group of this era.
(Dec 1985)