OPINION

Featured Artist: Al Stewart - The Discography, Pt. 2

Written by Natalie Davis
Published April 27, 2006
page 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7

DISC TWO:

  1. You Should Have Listened to Al
  2. Love Chronicles
  3. My Enemies Have Sweet Voices (Al Stewart & Peter Morgan)
  4. A Small Fruit Song
  5. Gethsemane, Again
  6. Burbling
  7. Electric Los Angeles Sunset
  8. Manuscript
  9. Black Hill
  10. Anna
  11. Room of Roots
  12. Zero She Flies


Between the Wars (Mesa/US, EMI/UK, 1995) - Stewart's touring schedule was flourishing - he was getting to make music for appreciative audiences and take care of his growing family, which now included a baby daughter. The music he was making reflected his growing comfort with the role of folk-pop troubadour, elder statesman and family man.

Another encouraging development was Stewart's new collaborator: former Paul McCartney and Wings guitarist Laurence Juber. With Al's blessing, Peter White had set off on his own creative path; he is now a successful solo smooth-jazz recording artist. Juber, a virtuoso player, and Stewart, no slouch himself on the six-string, shared a love for history and classic musical forms - both are huge fans of Bert Jansch and Django Reinhardt. As Juber supported Stewart's acoustic act on the road, the two decided to work together on a new Stewart album. This one - with Juber producing and playing guitar, banjo, dobro, mandolin - would tell stories from the time between the two world wars and incorporate the sounds of various eras.

BTW was the practically perfect melding of music and theme. Songs like the Asian-inspired "Sampan," the swinging spy intrigue "Night Train to Munich," the epic "Three Mules," and "A League of Notions," a rhythmically rolling and incisive piece that makes absolutely irresistible the history lesson contained within (the apportioning of control over losing nations after World War I; the League of Nations was a predecessor of today's United Nations).

I think I'm gonna take a piece of Russia And a piece of Germany And give them to Poland again I'll put together Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia And hope that is how they'll remain...

Given the small-label status of the project, the recording budget was tight, but Juber proved himself a skilled producer capable of fashioning lush sounds on a shoestring - for instance, the rich-sounding strings that color a number of the tracks was the work of Stewart and Juber on synthesized strings. The resulting product is especially memorable and another true Stewart classic, thanks to great songs - do try them all - and to a creative partnership that excels in painting vibrant sonic pictures that linger in the mind, soul and toes.

Tracks:

  1. Night Train to Munich
  2. The Age of Rhythm (Al Stewart & Laurence Juber)
  3. Sampan
  4. Lindy Comes to Town
  5. Three Mules
  6. A League of Notions
  7. Life Between The Wars
  8. Betty Boop's Birthday (Al Stewart & Laurence Juber)
  9. Marion the Chatelaine
  10. Joe the Georgian
  11. Always the Cause
  12. Laughing into 1939
  13. The Black Danube

page 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7
Natalie Davis is an award-winning journalist, progressive- and GLBT-issues activist, musician and broadcaster. Davis' All Facts and Opinions - The Armchair Activist has existed since 1996. She is general manager and program/music director of Grateful Dread Radio, an 11-year-old multigenre Internet station dedicated to presenting diverse sounds for open minds.
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Featured Artist: Al Stewart - The Discography, Pt. 2
Published: April 27, 2006
Type: Opinion
Section: Music
Filed Under: Music: Folk, Music: Pop, Music: Rock
Writer: Natalie Davis
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Comments

#1 — April 28, 2006 @ 08:36AM — Michael J. West [URL]

R&A is not at the top of the list of greatest Al Stewart recordings

The Hell it's not! It's at the VERY top of my list.

Incidentally, "The Gypsy and the Rose" is also UK only. I have the original US pressing or R&A and it ends with "The Candidate."

It's awfully hard to get past the synthesizers in LoDC. The songs really are as good as you say but the synths do date the album horribly.

#2 — April 28, 2006 @ 10:47AM — NR Davis [URL]

I'm with you on the LDOTC synths, Mr. West. Oh, yes. And thank for the head's up on "Gypsy and the Rose" - I thought I'd included that it was UK only, but I'll repair that. As for R&A, I'm glad it's your favorite. It isn't mine, and of course the piece is labeled Opinion, but that doesn't mean I don't love it. That would be categorically false.

#3 — April 28, 2006 @ 12:15PM — Michael J. West [URL]

Of course you're right, Ms. Davis, that the piece is labeled Opinion. But acknowledging that at the outset would have made it much harder to argue passionately and heatedly, which is the fun part of arguing isn't it?

While I'm here again, I might as well add that in so many ways it seems like Between the Wars was the album that Al had been wanting to make forever--most of his historical interest is in that period and the guitar parts for him and Juber both are an excellent showcase. In your encounters with him, Ms. Davis, did you ever ask him if he had a particular favorite among his releases?

#4 — April 28, 2006 @ 12:24PM — Jet in Columbus [URL]

As sad as it is to say this, I think two factors drove me away from Al.

Being a HUGE fan of Alan Parsons, when he wandered off to work on his other projects, Al's sound did indeed change, and it hurt, because I consider the Year of the cat, and Time Passages to be two of my all time favorite albums.

Another thing that kept me out of touch was that as Disco and Rap/hip-hop started taking over in that era, he got less airplay.

I thoroughly enjoyed both parts of this article, and you have my sincere compliments.

Jet

#5 — April 28, 2006 @ 12:56PM — NR Davis [URL]

Mr. West: Couldn't say. I don't find arguing or debate at all enjoyable.

You make a great observation about BTW, which many consider one of his masterpieces. Most of the time I've spent with Al has involved subjects other than him, but I do know that his favorite changes fairly regularly (and often it is whatever was released most recently). He has told me that "Optical Illusion" is one of his favorite compositions.

Mr. Jet: That is perfectly understandable, but do recall that Al was making music before his association with Parsons. Each man has his own muse to follow: Parsons followed his, before, during and after Al [the Project started in 1976]; it only makes sense that Al would do the same. Do not feel badly about it, though; your reasoning made sense and worked for you, which is what counts.

I thank you very much indeed for your kind words and hope you'll try some of his non-Parsons stuff with an open mind. I believe you'll find it a worthwhile experience - and trust me, Alan Parsons will be perfectly OK with you listening to his stuff and enjoying other stuff as well. :)

#6 — November 11, 2006 @ 12:42PM — Rob Macdonald

Natalie, I've just read Pt1 and Pt2 after attending Al's astonishing live performance at The Dome in Brighton (as it was November and he was in Brighton, he re-learnt the words to to 'Not the One' which as always been a favourite of mine). Thank you so much for this. I was considering extending the commentary on Al's albums on Wikipedia, but your words are so much better than any I would write, perhaps you might rise to the task?

#7 — August 26, 2007 @ 14:36PM — Jack Schwab

I interviewed Al regarding his association with Tori Amos. It was done for the Caldwells' "Really Deep Thoughts" Tori 'zine. They had the right to do with it whatever they wanted. I admit to over-reacting and acting immaturely at the time of publishing. That being said, Al himself was disappointed with the end result, as both him and Steve Chapman had approved my version. If any of you reading this are curious after all this time, it can be arranged to send you a hard copy. It's too long to transcribe again and save to a USB to send as an attachment.

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