Shaun Cassidy's
pop/rock career had effectively peaked when this album appeared, although he was still gamely trying to push the river.
Cassidy and songwriter-producer
Michael Lloyd certainly pulled out all the stops -- no less than 13 different musicians are credited.
Cassidy and
Lloyd appear among the seven keyboardists, while four different people handle the guitar honors. The problem isn't the production; it's a slick, yet solid exhibit of "late-'70s L.A. sound" that peers like
John Stewart and
Andrew Gold rode to gold and platinum success. There's
pop-tinged
disco (
"Are You Afraid of Me?," "Time for a Change"), synth-driven balladry (
"You Still Surprise Me"), and a nod to
Cassidy's
rock & roll roots with a slinky remake of
"The Letter," given a funkier, conga-accented treatment than the original. The real issue is a lack of distinctive material for
Cassidy to call his own. He and
Lloyd wrote or co-wrote all but one song --
"The Letter" -- so they definitely have to shoulder the blame.
Cassidy might have had better luck if he'd stuck to his stripped-down guns on
"Fallin' Into You" or
"Break for the Street," whose crisp delivery and guitar work make them the best moments here. But that's only because of the iffy company that surrounds them, although
"You're Usin' Me" benefits from a gritty vocal presumably inspired by hardbitten experience (as half-brother
David could attest).
"You Still Surprise Me" also brings the album to a strong closing note and awaits the definitive
soft rock reading. Almost anyone in
Cassidy's position could have made this sort of album, which suffers from a nagging seen-it-all-done-it-all syndrome -- which he acknowledged on the
new wave gestures of his next album,
Wasp. ~ Ralph Heibutzki