Note: This week’s Cutouts Gone Wild! comes to you courtesy of our friend Robert in Chicago, who thoughtfully volunteered to step in and share one of the dustier pieces of his music collection as I work on reassembling mine. Give him a tip of the hat and your very most heartfelt thanks! —J

British singer-songwriter Geoffrey Williams had already put out two albums in the U.S. when Giant/Reprise released Bare in 1992, but the LP’s lead single, “It’s Not a Love Thing” (download), was my first exposure to his talents (pun on album title intended only in hindsight). And what an introduction it was: “Love Thing” is one of the great lost singles of the ’90s, the kind of song I expected to hear everywhere in the summer of ’92, but it quickly stalled at #70 on the Billboard pop chart. Maybe Top 40 stations thought it was too R&B and R&B stations thought it was too Top 40, but whatever the case, “Love Thing’s” peak position was apropos considering that its retro ’70s vibe was a few years ahead of its time. I remember a North Carolina disc jockey comparing Williams to a young Sly Stone; indeed, “It’s Not a Love Thing” is delivered with palpable joy and pain thanks to the singer’s elastic, energetic vocals.

“Love Thing” is the best thing on Bare, but the album has several other standout tracks. The similarly titled “This Is Not a Love Song” (download) also features a defiant chorus that will resonate with anyone who’s ever been kicked to the curb by an ex; “Don’t Make Me Love You” (download) works itself into a soulful lather (“The flesh is weak,” Williams moans); and “Let Me Be Your Baby” (download), later recycled by Giant for Beverly Hills, 90210: The Soundtrack, creates a memorable late-night groove. (The American version of Bare has a different track listing than the one distributed by EMI in the UK and adds three cuts, including a “US Mix” of “It’s Not a Love Thing” that, unless my ears are crazy, is exactly the same as the original “UK Mix.”) Lyrically, Williams doesn’t dig too deep, but he’s no slouch when it comes to well-placed, sturdily crafted hooks — he cowrote the majority of Bare‘s songs with Simon Stirling and the album’s producer, Pete Glenister, who’d previously worked with Kirsty MacColl and, more tellingly, Terence Trent D’Arby — and he’s smart enough to keep the vocal histrionics in check.

Williams hasn’t been on a major label since Bare, but he still records and performs overseas. On a “study abroad” trip to England in ’97 I discovered Bare‘s follow-up, The Drop, which contains a few more memorable pop-soul contenders, including the lead-off track, “Sex Life” (download), on which Williams pleads, “My sex life needs your attention / Can’t wait for divine intervention.” Here’s hoping he’ll gift fans with another top-shelf collection of songs in the near future.

Bare can be purchased at Amazon.com.

About the Author

Robert Cass

Robert Cass lives in Chicago. For Popdose he's written under the Sugar Water, Bootleg City, and Box Office Flashback banners and collaborated on the series 'Face Time with Jeff Giles and Mike Heyliger.

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