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Proof of Crenshaw's genius is scattered throughout The Best of Marshall Crenshaw: This Is Easy, a catalogue skim-job issued recently by Rhino that, despite some major flaws and gaffes, provides a decent introduction to the man's canon. Too many fine songs are missing to be anything close to definitive -- blame Crenshaw for that, as he coproduced the thing -- but at least it establishes his unique voice within power pop, from his ability to write about women with compassion and understanding to his grasp of nearly everything great in rock history.
His debut single is here, 1982's “Something's Gonna Happen,” a vibrant, enthusiastic blast of lo-fi pop that was a nice warmup for his brilliant first album, Marshall Crenshaw, and its Top 40 hit “Someday, Someway.” That song was both a perfect single and power pop in its quintessence: tingly, buoyant, bristling with nervous sexual energy wrapped around an irrefutable hook. The non-LP flipside was just as good: “You're My Favorite Waste of Time,” a home-recorded one-man homage to the big-boom pop of Phil Spector. The album offered much more, including the Spectorized “Cynical Girl,” a hot-wired rockabilly rave-up (“The Usual Thing,” featuring some fine slapping upright bass from future Bob Dylan bassist Tony Garnier), and a slew of well-crafted little gems that borrowed from the likes of Del Shannon, Buddy Holly, Bobby Fuller, and Arthur Alexander (via a terrific cover of “Soldier of Love”).
Crenshaw followed his debut record with 1983's Field Day, a front-to-back masterpiece boasting thunderous production by Steve Lillywhite, a shoulda-hit in “Whenever You're on My Mind,” and Crenshaw's finest collection of material. That the album flopped will forever remain a mystery. Critics pooh-poohed the somewhat heavy-handed sound of the album, but no one listens to critics, do they? Maybe it was just a sign of the times: In 1983 electro-pop had pretty much taken over the airwaves, and Crenshaw had little in common with MTV darlings à la Men Without Hats, A Flock of Seagulls, and Duran Duran. Whatever the case Field Day remains the greatest power-pop commercial dud this side of Big Star's Radio City.
By 1985's Downtown Crenshaw's faith in romance had begun to sour a bit, with songs such as “The Distance Between,” “Lesson Number One,” and “Like a Vague Memory” exploring love's thorny underbelly. His rock and roll heart was still alive, though, as evidenced on the exuberant “Little Wild One (No. 5),” “Terrifying Love,” and the thumping “(We're Gonna) Shake Up Their Minds.” Sadly Downtown was Crenshaw's last genuinely great longplayer; the albums that followed each have their moments, but mostly they find him settling a bit too comfortably into the role of power-pop journeyman. This Is Easy salvages some of the treasure from lesser albums such as Good Evening and Life's Too Short, but it also shortchanges much of Crenshaw's legacy: Too many good songs are missing, too many choice rarities omitted, and there's no trace of the man's exquisite taste in covers, through which he has feted the Jive Five, Harry Nilsson, Webb Pierce, Merle Haggard, Buddy Holly, Hank Mizell, and Chris Knox, among others.