Home Read Classic Album Review: Harry Nilsson | Pussy Cats

Classic Album Review: Harry Nilsson | Pussy Cats

Nilsson and his famous drinking buddies crank out a set of raucous, rollicking covers.

This came out in 2003 – or at least that’s when I got it. Here’s what I said about it back then (with some minor editing):

 


Much of ’70s singer-songwriter Harry Nilsson’s fame seemed to come secondhand. As a singer, the golden-voiced New Yorker is perhaps best known for the Midnight Cowboy theme Everybody’s Talkin’ — which he didn’t write — and the novelty number Coconut. As a composer, his most enduring song might be One — though Three Dog Night had a bigger hit with the tune. And as a pop culture icon, he’s known mainly as John Lennon’s sidekick during the Beatle’s 1974 ‘lost weekend’ in L.A. Still, Nilsson’s influence on contemporary music — particularly the quirky, literate pop of artists like Ben Folds, XTC, Rufus Wainwright and Hawksley Workman — is undeniable. To give credit where it’s due, BMG has reissued virtually the entire Nilsson catalog, some 15 albums spread across 10 CDs. I sifted through them all so you don’t have to.

 


Harry Nilsson
Pussy Cats

FIRST RELEASED: 1974.

HIGHLIGHTS: Call it the soundtrack to the ‘lost weekend.’ Pussycats features Nilsson and drinking buddy John Lennon — along with an cronies like Ringo Starr, Keith Moon, Jim Keltner and Bobby Keys — cranking out raucous, rollicking covers of Many Rivers to Cross, Subterranean Homesick Blues and Rock Around the Clock, interspersed with decent Nilsson originals.

EXTRAS! EXTRAS! Three originals — including a version of the bizarre shaggy-dog musical-skit Flying Saucer Song — along with an alternate version of Save The Last Dance For Me.