She says she’s grateful to have a song that everyone knows,even if its sunny optimism about the first rush of new love makes it an outlier in her generally spikier oeuvre.
This,after all,is the singer whose breakthrough in 1985 with the band Do-Re-Mi was the excoriatingMan Overboard,a chorus-less ode to marital malaise that wore its feminism on its sleeve,and featured congas.
Rather than a greatest hits show,Songs from the Book of Lifecherry-picks songs that reflect meaningfully on episodes from her life. For instance,a 2016 ballad about parenthood,Serpent’s Tooth,follows an eye-opening soliloquy about her father’s mental illness and discussion of her own relationship to her daughters.
Conway,now 64,still has the megawatt smile,the killer cheekbones and the svelte figure that saw her begin her career in modelling,and even landed her a lead role in an ’80s Ozploitation picture (Running on Empty – admired still by the drag race set).
Her voice,always powerful and impressive,now has a beguiling twang – perhaps a legacy of her Patsy Cline period. As you’d expect,Zygier harmonises perfectly with his wife,circling her unobtrusively while deploying flawless guitar embellishments.