Raul Malo has kept a certain distance from his creative past in
the Mavericks on his solo releases, choosing to focus on his
pop,
jazz, or
Latin influences rather than the more
country-accented tunes that put his old band on the charts. However,
Malo's sixth solo effort,
Lucky One, more clearly recalls his work with
the Mavericks than anything he's done since the group called it quits. Admittedly, this set suggests the style of
Music for All Occasions and
Trampoline, where
Malo and his bandmates began throwing off the restrictions of traditional Nashville record making with gusto, and anyone expecting a sequel to
What a Crying Shame is going to feel let down. But the deep, twangy guitars of
"Something Tells Me" and
"Crying for You" call up the shade of
Malo's most famous work, and though
"Hello Again" and the title cut are more strongly
pop-influenced, his soaring
Roy Orbison-influenced vocals will certainly please anyone who loved the way he sounded on his hits with the group. Don't get the idea that
Malo has turned away from the stylistic shape-shifting of his more recent discs; the easy swagger of
"Moonlight Kiss" makes him sound like the lost member of the Rat Pack, he slinks through some slow supper club
blues on
"Ready for My Lovin'," delivers a lively Mex-Tex two step on
"Lonely Hearts," and puts his heart on his sleeve with
"So Beautiful," the love ballad that closes out the set. Producer
Steve Berlin dresses these songs in clever arrangements that honor
Malo's many musical moods and give the melodies a satisfying, emotionally honest core that holds this album together.
Lucky One isn't
the Mavericks, but it's closer to what made that band great than anything
Malo has recorded in a while, and shows that he remains a great singer and powerfully imaginative musician regardless of the context. ~ Mark Deming