This is the second half of the lovely piece on Nobody's Perfect at the THENEWPERFECTCOLLECTION, which also plugs the Parabolically Yours PledgeMusic campaign:
Driven to Distraction was Mike
Finney as he sang of heads ransacked by Cupid, in a voice which told of
Saturday nights at the Wigan Casino spent trying to forget Friday nights
on Deansgate. By this time there’d have been plenty of those – drummer
Alec Sidebottom had late ’60s form with the Purple Gang, who gave us the
recklessly twee Granny Takes A Trip, while another highlight of
Nobody’s Perfect is their version of Eden Kane’s Boys Cry, where the
“someone who says goodbye” in the knock-kneed period piece of the 1964
original is transformed from a soon-forgotten tryst into something
bordering on bereavement.
Yet there’s real wit amid the
desolation, on each side’s closer. Paracetamol Paralysis is pell-mell
cautionary punk with sound medical advice on drinking while trying to
fend off the flu – and it really is as innocent as that; when they say
paracetamol, they mean paracetamol. That pair from Burnage might have
managed to come up with this if only they’d kept trying after 1996. Then
it’s all rounded off not with the desperate comfort of the penultimate
Looking For A Ghost but the sub-two minute sprint of Valerie, where a
palm court piano is caddishly shoved aside by a marauding tune fleeing
from Pete Shelley as he tries to grab back the greatest song he never
wrote. Even here there’s defeat as Finney faces up to the most
pulverising blow a heart can take – “I love Valerie but Valerie loves
YOU!!”