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Wednesday, 23 February 2022

"The Rod Stewart Album" aka "An Old Raincoat Won't Let You Down" by ROD STEWART – September 1969 US Debut Album on Mercury Records, February 1970 UK Debut Album on Vertigo Records In Different Artwork – Inside "Reason To Believe: The Complete Mercury Studio Recordings" - Featuring Ronnie Lane (of Small Faces and Faces), Ron Wood (of Faces and The Rolling Stones), Martin Pugh and Martin Quittenton (of Steamhammer), Mick Waller (of Steampacket), Ian McLagan (of Small Faces and The Who) with Keith Emerson (pre E.L.P.) and more (November 2002 UK Mercury Anthology – 5LPs, Singles and Rarities Remastered onto 3CDs) - A Review by Mark Barry...

 
September 1969 US Debut Album on Mercury Records 
Titled "The Rod Stewart Album"
See Below for February 1970 UK LP with Different Title and Artwork (Same Tracks)
 
"…I Wouldn't Change A Thing…"
 
"Take me back...down the Gasoline Alley where I came from..." I've been meaning to heap praise on this Chronicles 3CD Digipak of Scots Shortbread for years now - so here are the tartan scarves, champagne buckets and caviar pillow stains. Techo bits first...
 
USA/UK released November 2002 (reissued January 2005) – "Reason To Believe: The Complete Mercury Studio Recordings" by ROD STEWART on Mercury/Universal/Chronicles 440 063 422-2 (Barcode 044006342221) is a 3CD set and breaks down as follows:
 
Disc 1 (79:19 minutes):
1. Street Fighting Man [Side 1]
2. Man Of Constant Sorrow
3. Blind Prayer
4. Handbags And Gladrags
5. An Old Raincoat Won't Ever Let You Down [Side 2]
6. I Wouldn't Ever Change A Thing
7. Cindy's Lament
8. Dirty Old Town
Tracks 1 to 8 are his debut LP "An Old Raincoat Won’t Let You Down" – released February 1970 on Vertigo VO 4 in the UK. Mercury SR-61237 was released September 1969 in the USA where the album was lumbered with the hugely unimaginative title of "The Rod Stewart Album" itself matching the dreadfully plain and boring artwork (different to the beautiful UK version on Vertigo but with the same tracks). As this is effectively an American 3CD release – the booklet doesn't picture the lovely photograph gatefold of the UK artwork – only the US one – more’s the pity.
 
 
"Reason To Believe..." 3CD Remasters 
 
The 24-page booklet is housed in a three-way foldout card digipak with each flap featuring live photos (pictures beneath the see-through plastic trays also). AMY LINDEN provides the liner notes and there's discography info on each track and overall recording credits. But the big news is the SUHA GUR remasters which are fantastic – full of presence and life and that raunchy feel Stewart got at the time.
 
Looking for audio-glory, for many the first port of call on this 3CD set will be the more popular and well-known "Every Picture Tells A Story" and "Never A Dull Moment" sets. Both are 5-star Rod Stewart classics with nuggets like the gorgeous "Mandolin Wind" and the raucous "Los Paraguayos". But it's the first two British LPs issued on Vertigo at the tail ends of 1970 - "An Old Raincoat Won't Let You Down" and "Gasoline Alley" - that I keep returning to when I play this massive CD haul.
 
Lyrically and musically – there is so much richness here. Armed with a God-given set of tonsils and a way with observation and melody - song after song smacks you over the head with greatness and smart choices. And all of it with that fantastic band of his. In short, his sessions were dripping with that loose but cool British Rock 'n' Roll swagger that seemed to come so easily to all of them. Let's get to the beginning...
 
 
February 1970 UK Sleeve for his Debut Album 
"An Old Raincoat Won't Let You Down" 
Different (Better) Artwork To The Earlier US Debut "The Rod Stewart Album"
 
The crew for the debut included Ron Wood (soon to be in the Faces and later The Rolling Stones) and Martin Pugh of Steamhammer on Guitars, Ian McLagan on Keyboards, Martin Quittenton of Steamhammer on Acoustic Guitar, Ron Wood also on Bass with Mick Waller of Steampacket on Drums. 
 
Stewart opens Side 1's musical account with a Rolling Stones rebel call - "Street Fighting Man" – tremendous panache in his version filled with right speaker lead electric guitar dirtiness – his rasping vocals thrilling ("...Summer is here and the time is right for fighting in the streets.") Ginger Baker's Airforce would make a 1970 Polydor 45-single out of a live version of the folky "Man Of Constant Sorrow" – the kind of acoustic lament Stewart seems to thrive on.
 
His own "Blind Prayer" talks of mum and dad lost to a fire way up on the 14th floor as dirty guitars and drums rattle and stab. Manfred Mann's Mike D'abo provides a haunting "Handbags And Gladrags" – arranging and playing piano on his own composition too. H&G is a fabulous moment on the LP – a gorgeous real-world lament of rags to riches. Ron Wood sticks it with grungy Bass on the UK title track "An Old Raincoat Won't Let You Down" (another Rodders original) – a well-made slice of English garb to keep you from the drizzling rain.
 
We get the superb keyboard contribution of a pre 'Emerson, Lake & Palmer' Keith Emerson on "I Wouldn't Ever Change A Thing" – probably my fave-rave for the whole album and another RS original. A hissy but powerful organ lingers at the beginning of "Cindy's Lament" only to settle into a rocking riff where Cindy doesn't seem to notice our boy nearly as much as he would prefer. Love the way the piano comes in too – the remaster rattling the room. Rod ends his debut album with a gorgeous Scottish air from Ewan MacColl - "Dirty Old Town" – kissing his girl by the factory wall. His next platter was of course "Gasoline Alley" – the title track is enough to make me melt like butter.
 
The 3CD set "Reason To Believe: The Complete Mercury Studio Recordings" is that rare instance of quality and quantity combined in a peerless compilation and of all of it wrapped up in that top-quality remastered sound.
 
"...Combed my hair in a thousand ways…but I come out looking the same…" - Rod sang on 1971's "Every Picture Tells A Story". Forget all the expensive alternatives - this is the musical mirror you want to look in to…

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