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Critic's Review
Jo-Ann Greene, All Music Guide
musical directions by the release the month before of "Stereotypes," its spaghetti-western aura filled with the group's more mournful mood. It's an emotional despair taken to even greater heights on "Do Nothing," as the group futilely searches for a future, but musically stumbles upon a cheery, easygoing rhythm more appropriate to the pop styles of the English Beat than the angrier sounds the Specials had made their own. But to prove it's no fluke, there's the equally bright and breezy "Hey, Little Rich Girl," boasting fabulous sax solos from Madness' Lee Thompson. However, it's an immortal line from "Pearl's Cafe" that Terry Hall and the guesting Bodysnatcher Rhoda Dakar deliver up in duet that best sums up their own and the country's pure frustration: "It's all a load of bollocks, and bollocks to it all." It was an intensely satisfying set in its day, even if it wasn't as centered as their debut. The group seems to be moving simultaneously in too many directions, while the lyrics, too, are not quite as hard-hitting as earlier efforts. In retrospect, there's no surprise that only "Enjoy Yourself" appeared regularly in the band and its related projects' sets. Which may explain why this enhanced-CD reissue includes videos not of the album's singles, but of the two hits not on the set, "Ghost Town" and "Rat Race."
