Give Us A Wink
The mere cover of this album draws the attention to the call in the title it is possible to make the cover wink with the quick pulling up and down of the inside cover (unfortunately those who have this album on CD cannot do it). But if after a short play with the cover one puts the album on the turntable, (s)he can immediately make sure of that the first class cover hides first class music. It is tense, twisting and hard with fantastic solos all along. This album is rather brother of Sweet Fanny Adams than of its predecessor, Desolation Boulevard. Unfortunately the sound engineer's work is appallingly bad, the whole record is undynamic, sounds dimly and veiledly. But Andy & Co. indemnify the listener with their music. The Give Us A Wink is one of the best underrated albums of the rock history, but is was a honourable mention that the Repertoire re-issued it in 1990.
The album is glowing by constant heat all along, there are no considerable mood changes in it. The extrovertness is not so emphasised as on Sweet Fanny Adams, but still stands nearer to it than to the far more intimate and personal Desolation Boulevard.It has beenthe most dense SWEET music until the datein respect of the instrumental occurences. The only dreamy and mystic song, the 4th of July has also quick tempo and is not a real lyrical song. In the same time it's interesting that the slowest song, Healer, however, is a very hard song. The lead vocals are handled by Brian in each song and they composed every song together (though it is well-known that in the composing work, mainly in the final elaboration, the most work were performed by Andy and Steve).
The compositions are long that gives good occasion for the solos that is totally utilized by the guys, mainly by Andy. It's the first case in the SWEET's history that they are using synthesizers in some composition. Nevertheless it does not play a leading role nowhere, maybe in the opening track only..
The Lies In Your Eyes
The album is starting with a sysnthesizer voice that is a bit similar to the cricket chirp, then the guitar-bass-drum trio is brutally blasting and a simple, stamping drumming is giving the basic rhythm that is unusual from Mick and is sounding as if Mick was keeping on kicking a big cupboard with a brogue. It is the simplest song on the record, it has been released on single not long before the album, actually as a follow-up for the album. The song, despite its simplicity, is impressive, the choir is very good in the refrain in which Steve is singing a line in solo. There is some overture-like in this song, so to put it on the record as opening track was perfect choice.
Cockroach
Mick is breaking on the drums in the beginning of the song in the way as if he had enough of the very simple, monotonous drumming he was constrained to do in the previous song. From this 'wide', 'big space' drum overture that recalls John Bonham'”s drum work, a relatively slow piece with pulsating rhythm is evolving that is the relative of the Into the Night in rhythm and melody line. Brian is singing the verses a bit in Steve's rap style and very hard, almost only is dashing off the lines furiously. The refrain is completely strange, tuneless with an oddly shifting choir. It is almost impossible to find out the rhythm during the singing in the refrain. Therefore this very hard song is still floating and has a surrealistic feeling. The instrumental middle section is brutally hard and very fast. This song was the B side of the single The Lies In Your Eyes and also here fits well as is following it. Superb music where Mick is the most hyped amongst the guys.
Keep It In
Despite musically it is one of the most outstanding compositions in SWEET's career, is not listed generally as one of their highlights. Perhaps it is Mick's other greatest song in addition to the Man With The Golden Arm that one can consider as his hymn. Though the song was composed by the band, Mick drumming is an almost continuous solo that makes the song's pulsation extremely exciting. Actually there is no one moment in which Mick does not perform some stormy theme. Despite it, Mick's drum is not drowning the other instruments and Brian's voice out. The brilliant composition's only weak side is the bland singing and melody. It can be felt that the guys took delight in working on the song in the studio that was based on improvisation and I suppose that the song was recorded in live in studio way. Fantastic amount of energy is concentrated in this song and even the the most choosey listeners would gasp for breath if it was a pure instrumental composition. Because, if we glorified Mick, the finest words can be told about Andy and Steve's play: virtuoso, quick, twisting and mainly is full of brilliant ideas and turns. Though there is no moment when the listener can predict what will follows, it is still a precisely constructed and consciously edited composition that goes from a starting point, in an ordered progress, to a closing one. Brilliant song.
4th of July
This is the album's only mystic, dreamy song that is, in the same time, a middle tempo hard rock. The verse lines are hard and whirling but strangely floating all along that is fullfilled in the celestial choir of the refrain. This part is from the finest moments of the legendary choir works of the SWEET: soaring, mystic and incomprehensible. This hard song is becoming almost hymnic when is arriving at the end of the refrain but is staying very far from the cheesy straining after effects. The cosmic feeling is increasing in the instrumental movement when suddenly, but finely, a dreamy electric piano solo is fading in from somewhere that is performed by their friend, Trevor Griffin. This is a bit as if in front of a bizarrely beautiful celestial background, a space creature was swimming all along, playing on the piano that is floating together with him. The whole surrealistic pattern is starting to be lost in haze, when – by a bit distorted voice – a vague choir is appearing to the more and more enchanting floating. This is the beginning of an awakening where the listener is falling back to the main theme. After the subsequent refrain the previous feeling is coming backonce again in a bit different way. One would expect that the composition is ending by fading, but instead, the listener is quickly getting back to the real world and after repeating of a monotonous riff, the song and the record side is ending by sound of a big crash. The listener lived through some of the greatest, most unforgettable moment of rock music that are one of the most outstanding work in SWEET's career. The break, when the listener turns the record, stands the him in good stead to digest the occurences of the previous minutes.