Walk Between Worlds was produced by Simple Minds with Andy Wright and Gavin
Goldberg, both of whom worked on Big Music. With its eight tracks rocketing past
in 42 minutes, it is a relatively concise affair. It is also an album of two
distinct sides, very much the old-school
album format that singer Jim Kerr and Charlie Burchill grew up with as music
fans. Side one tracks such as Summer and The Signal And The Noise revisit the
glassy guitars and new wave dance grooves of the post-punk era and the second
half explores more cinematic sounds, with the title track and Barrowland Star
both featuring dramatic orchestrations recorded at Abbey Road.
The album is bookended by two songs about faith, Magic and Sense Of Discovery. The first is a reflection on the desire and hunger of youth – the faith in their own abilities that Simple Minds possessed during their formative years. Sense Of Discovery, which features a melodic refrain that alludes to 1985’s Alive And Kicking, is centred on the voice of an older narrator passing on wisdom and advice to a younger individual.
One of the album’s key tracks is Barrowland Star, named after the iconic
ballroom in the East End of Glasgow that has hosted many memorable Simple Minds
shows. It’s a song that takes the band away from their traditional comfort
zone, layering strings and a spellbinding
Charlie guitar solo (one that reminds Jim of Mick Ronson) over some poignant
words. For Jim and Charlie playing the Barrowland was always a big deal, a
mixture of excitement – and fear – it felt as if they were about to engage
in a prize-fight rather than simply play a rock concert.
Simple Minds were the standard bearers for a new kind of rock in the
Eighties, when they took the art-rock invention of post-punk and constructed a
musical Colossus by adding rousing choruses and a touch of Celtic soul. As they
contemplate turning 40, their legacy is
something to be proud of and with Walk Between Worlds their story continues to
evolve.