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Sunday, 12 March 2023

"Eighties Albums (Four)" by PHIL COLLINS - Featuring "Face Value" (February 1981 UK Debut Solo Album after Genesis), "Hello, I Must Be Going!" (November 1982 Second), "No Jacket Required" (February 1985 Third), "...But Seriously" (November 1989 Fourth) on Virgin Records UK and Atlantic Records USA – Guests Include Ronnie Scott, Eric Clapton, Stephen Bishop, Shankar, Steve Winwood, David Crosby, Daryl Stuermer (later with Genesis), Earth, Wind & Fire Horns, The Phoenix Horns with Arif Mardin Arranged Strings and Backing Vocals from Helen Terry, Peter Gabriel and Sting – Four Albums of Eight Inside "Take A Look At Me Now...The Complete Remastered Studio Albums" (November 2017 UK Atlantic 8CD Mini Box Set of 2015 and 2016 Abbey Road Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...




 

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This Review and 209 more are in my E-Book
Available on AMAZON 

LET'S GO CRAZY - 80ts Music On CD

Your All-Genres Guide To Exceptional CD Reissues and Remasters
Classic Albums, Compilations, 45s
All In-Depth Reviews from the Discs Themselves
Over 1,650 e-Pages of Info
(No Cut and Paste Crap)

 

"...Another Day In Paradise..."

 

In March 2023 - it's been over 42 years since I played some of these albums and I have to say - what with the 2015 and 2016 Abbey Road Remasters – the first four from the Eighties - "Face Value" (February 1981), "Hello, I Must Be Going!" (November 1982), "No Jacket Required" (February 1985) and "...But Seriously" (November 1989) stand up so well – especially his account-opener, the third and the fourth mega-seller "...But Seriously" that as I recall pushed over 3-millions sales in the UK alone.

 

All four along with another quad from his later career up to 2010 have been gathered together in this November 2017 not-much-frills but great-value-for-money gather-em-all-up 8-disc Box Set from the mighty trio of Atlantic, Warners and Rhino. Each features 2015 and 2016 Remasters done by the much respected Audio Engineers NICK DAVIS and MIKE SHOWELL at Abbey Road Studios and come in oversized gatefold card sleeves with updated facial artwork (no booklets or overall inlay either). Lot to get serious about - to the details of the first four...

 

UK released November 2017 - "Take A Look At Me Now...The Complete Remastered Studio Albums" by PHIL COLLINS on Atlantic/Warners/Rhino 0603497865192 (Barcode 0603497865192) is an 8CD Box Set offering 2015 Remasters of his Studio albums between 1981 and 2010. They play out as follows...

 

CD1 (47:55 minutes):

2015 Remaster by Nick Davis, Mastered Mike Showell at Abbey Road

1. In The Air Tonight [Side 1]

2. This Must Be Love

3. Behind The Lines

4. The Roof Is Leaking

5. Droned

6. Hand In Hand

7. I Missed Again [Side 2]

8. You Know What I Mean

9. Thunder And Lightning

10. I'm Not Moving

11. If Leaving Me Is Easy

12. Tomorrow Never Knows

13. Over The Rainbow

Tracks 1 to 13 are the debut solo album "Face Value" – released February 1981 in the UK on Virgin Records V 2185 and on Atlantic Records SD 16029. Produced by PHIL COLLINS and HUGH PADGHAM – it peaked at No.1 in the UK and No.7 in the USA

 

CD2 (45:56 minutes):

2015 Remaster by Nick Davis, Mastered Mike Showell at Abbey Road

1. I Don't Care Anymore [Side 1]

2. I Cannot Believe It's True

3. Like China

4. Do You Know, Do You Care?

5. You Can't Hurry Love

6. It Don't Matter To Me [Side 2]

7. Thru These Walls

8. Don't Let Him Steal Your Heart Away

9. The West Side

10. Why Can't It Wait 'Til Morning

Tracks 1 to 10 are his second solo album "Hello, I Must Be Going?" – released November 1982 in the UK on Virgin Records V 2252 and in the USA on Atlantic 7 80035-1. Produced by PHIL COLLINS and HUGH PADGHAM – it peaked at No.2 in the UK and No.8 in the USA (title is a Marx Brothers quote from the Movie Animal Crackers)

 

CD3 (50:52 minutes):

2016 Remaster by Nick Davis, Mastered Mike Showell at Abbey Road

1. Sussudio [Side 1]

2. Only You Know And I Know

3. Long Long Way To Go

4. I Don't Want To Know

5. One More Night

6. Don't Lose My Number [Side 2]

7. Who Said I Would

8. Doesn't Anybody Stay Together Anymore

9. Inside Out

10. Take Me Home

11. We Said Hello Goodbye

Tracks 1 to 11 are his third solo album "No Jacket Required" – released January 1985 in the UK on Virgin Records V 2345 (LP) and VCD 2345 (CD) and in the USA on Atlantic Records 7 81240-1 (LP) and 7 812400-2 (CD). Produced by PHIL COLLINS and HUGH PADGHAM – it peaked at No.1 in the UK and No.1 in the USA

 

CD4 (59:49 minutes):

2016 Remaster by Nick Davis, Mastered Mike Showell at Abbey Road

1. Hang In Long Enough [Side 1]

2. That's Just The Way It Is

3. Do You Remember?

4. Something Happened On The Way To Heaven

5. Colours

6. I Wish It Would Rain Down

7. Another Day In Paradise

8. Heat On The Street

9. All Of My Life

10. Saturday Night And Sunday Morning

11. Father To Son

12. Find A Way To My Heart

Tracks 1 to 12 are the CD album for "...But Seriously" – released November 1989 in the UK on Virgin CDV 2620 and Atlantic 82050-2 in the USA. Produced by PHIL COLLINS and HUGH PADGHAM – it peaked at No.1 in both the UK and USA. As was customary with releases in the middle to late Eighties because of the formats extended playing time capabilities over vinyl – the CD variant offered Two Bonus Tracks - "Heat On The Street" and "Saturday Night And Sunday Morning". The 10-track LP in this case on Virgin V 2620 also had a radically altered track line-up. To sequence the LP...

Side 1: Tracks 1, 2, 12, 5 and 11

Side 2: Tracks 7, 9, 4, 3 and 6



The lack of annotation robs you of useful info – especially when it comes to the brilliant musicians he regularly used as his studio band (Daryl Stuermer later with Genesis and Dominic Miller of Sting’s band on Guitars - Leland Sklar, Nathan East and Pino Palladino on Basses) alongside those tasty guest spots - Helen Terry of Pink Floyd’s The Great Gig In The Sky fame, Sting, Peter Gabriel, David Crosby, Stephen Bishop, Eric Clapton, Steve Winwood, Shankar, Earth Wind & Fire and The Phoenix Horns, Arif Mardin String Arrangements – you get the picture.

 

For instance as Track 12 on the debut "Face Value" fades out, it segues into a Hidden Acapella cover version of the famous Wizard Of Oz song "Over The Rainbow" – it only lasts for 20-seconds or so but is not credited on the LP. The rear sleeve artwork here also stays faithful to the original LP by not printing the Bonus Track at the end of Side 2 so that it appears that his cover of The Beatles Revolver track "Tomorrow Never Knows" finishes the LP. For these CD Remasters and Reissues, Collins has also changed the artwork to a face shot of him in older age rather the 1981, 1982 etc versions.

 

For your info – friend and pal to Collins, Stephen Bishop provides backing vocals for "This Must Be Love" on the debut and the gorgeous/painful "Do You Remember?" on the "...But Seriously", Eric Clapton plays guitar on the terminally sad "If Leaving Me Is Easy" on the debut and "I Wish it Would Rain Down" on platter number four, while the legendary Producer and Arranger to so many stars Arif Mardin does gorgeous Strings work on "If Leaving Me Is Easy" and especially the stunning "You Know What I Mean" when it just Collins and the cellos carrying the loneliness and hurt. Other big contributors include Shankar who would of course feature on so many 80ts albums by Peter Gabriel, Saxophone Solo from Ronnie Scott on "I Missed Again" and the horns of Earth, Wind And Fire. And there are others too.

 

The Phenix Horns and serious session Saxophonists Don Myrick and Gary Barnacle are all over the big breakthrough LP "No Jacket Required" in 1985 that hit the number one spot on both sides of the pond. "Take Me Home" on Side 2 of that album features a bevvy of backing vocals – Helen Terry, Phil, Peter Gabriel and Sting.

 

A box set like this allows you to dip in too - surprises come in the shape of the sparse but emotive "The Roof Is Leaking" on the feeling-for-his-place debut – a tale of a man with a wife expecting, kids cold and another bad winter on the way. Jo Partridge of The Kiki Dee Band puts in superb slide guitar work that puts a menace in the lyrics of a desperate man looking for light up ahead. Daryl Stuermer of Sweetbottom (who contributes subtle banjo plucks) would later become guitarist with Genesis for long stretches. Collins then stretches out musically with the brilliant hum/instrumental "Droned" – both Shankar and Stuermer making their instrument contributions stand out. The Arif Mardin strings on the heartbreak of "One More Night" – the start of his obsession with Soul and R&B covers of the Sixties and Seventies when he did The Supremes hit "You Can't Hurry Love" for the second LP "Hello, I Must Be Going!"

 

The Children From The Churches of Los Angeles provide the nah-nahs throughout the brass-funky gem that is the Side 1 closer "Hand In Hand" on the debut – an instrumental that is still so damn contemporary (someone plays this on the radio and you're gonna want know who it is and then by surprised by the name outcome). You can so hear how Phil Collins has the knack for a hit hook – it might not get there without words – but what a great listen forty-plus years down the road - the Remaster kicking as those fantastic E, W & F horns rock your living room.

 

Too much success seems to put a hex on some artists – the public's viewpoint easily forgetting the body of work. Wildly successful for much of that decade, he seemed to slide for everything after – at least in the eyes of the public. But this set only amplifies what I loved about Phil Collins songs – they hit the feet and the heart. There are so many returned moments of pleasure here that remind me of his uncanny knack with a melody and touching lyrics - always the strongest arrow in his hugely successful six-decade career from 1969 to 2023. Top stuff my son...

Saturday, 11 March 2023

"Purple Rain" by PRINCE and THE REVOLUTION – July 1984 Album on Warner Brothers (June 2017 UK Warner Brothers/NPG 3CD + 1DVD 'Ultimate Collector's Edition' Reissue with a Remastered Album, Unreleased Studio Material, B-sides and Single Mixes, a Live Concert and Bernie Grundman Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...






 

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This Review and 209 more are in my E-Book
Available on AMAZON 

LET'S GO CRAZY - 80ts Music On CD

Your All-Genres Guide To Exceptional CD Reissues and Remasters
Classic Albums, Compilations, 45s
All In-Depth Reviews from the Discs Themselves
Over 1,650 e-Pages of Info
(No Cut and Paste Crap)

 

"...Let's Pretend We're Married..." 

 

Having only just turned 26 years of age mere weeks before its worldwide release, Prince was already a five-album veteran for a major respected record label (Warner Brothers). But platter number six - "Purple Rain" from late June 1984 - sent him, his world and the rest of ours - into serious reeling mode.

 

As if the double-album "1999" from 1982 wasn't enough, "Purple Rain" arrived like a frenzied storm-trooper ready to prove a point to his mommy who didn't love him enough and left a copy of Hustler lying around the little darlings crib. From the opening Guitar/Synth Pop attack of "Let's Go Crazy" to the stunning and indeed majestic title track "Purple Rain" that ended Side 2 with a string arrangement that still leaves me jaw-struck - the whole album was a take-no-prisoners assault by both the artist and his tighter-than-tight backing group - The Revolution (credited for the first time as his chosen band on the LP artwork).

 

But the famous records transition to digital has been a tale of woe for far too many decades. Well now - at last - we get the 'Ultimate Collector's Edition' and 'Super Deluxe Edition' treatment in 2017 - reissues that like the album 'pour it on'. We're dealing with the baby version. Here are the dove details...

 

UK released 23 June 2017 - "Purple Rain" by PRINCE and THE REVOLUTION on Warner Records/NPG 9362-49132-0 (Barcode 093624913207) is a 3CD + 1DVD 'Ultimate Collector's Edition' Reissue with Rarities, Unreleased Material and Bernie Grundman Remasters. It plays out as follows:

 

CD1 "Original Album – 2015 Paisley Park Remaster" (43:48 minutes):

1. Let's Go Crazy

2. Take Me With U

3. The Beautiful Ones

4. Computer Blue

5. Darling Nikki

6. When Doves Cry [Side 2]

7. I Would Die 4 U

8. Baby I'm A Star

9. Purple Rain

Tracks 1 to 9 are his sixth studio album "Purple Rain" (first credited to Prince and The Revolution – released 27 July 1984 in the USA on Warner Brothers 25110-1 and in the UK on Warner Brothers 925 110-1. Produced by PRINCE – it peaked at No. 1 in the USA and No. 7 in the UK.

 

CD2 "From The Vault and Previously Unreleased" (76:33 minutes):

1. The Dance Electric (11:29 minutes)

2. Love And Sex (5:00 minutes)

3. Computer Blue ("Hallways Speech" Version) (12:18 minutes)

4. Electric Intercourse (Studio Version) (4:57 minutes)

5. Our Destiny/Roadhouse Garden (6:25 minutes)

6. Possessed (7:56 minutes)

7. Wonderful Ass

8. Velvet Kitty Cat

9. Katrina's Paper Dolls

10. We Can F**k

11. Father's Song

 

CD3 "Single Edits & B-Sides" Bernie Grundman Remasters (78:05 minutes):

1. When Doves Cry (7" Single Edit) – A-side, May 1984 US 45-single, Warner Brothers 29286

2. 17 Days (Edit) – B-side of "When Doves Cry", May 1984 US 45-single, Warner Brothers 29286

3. Let's Go Crazy (7" Single Edit) – A-side, July 1984 US 45-single, Warner Brothers 29216

4. Let's Go Crazy (Special Dance Mix) – August 1984 US 12" Single, A-side of Warner Brothers 20246

5. Erotic City (Edit) – B-side of "Let's Go Crazy", July 1984 US 45-single, Warner Brothers 29216

6. Erotic City ("Make Love Not War Erotic City Come Alive") – B-side of "Let's Go Crazy", August 1984 US 12" Single Extended Version, Warner Brothers 20246

7. Purple Rain (7" Edit) – A-side, September 1984 US 45-single, Warner Brothers 29174

8. God – B-side of "Purple Rain", September 1984 US 45-single, Warner Brothers 29174

9. God (Love Theme From Purple Rain) – B-side of UK 12" Single for "Purple Rain", September 1984 on Warner Brothers W 9174 T

10. Another Lonely Christmas (Edit) – B-side of "I Would Die 4 U", November 1984 US 45-single on Warner Brothers 20291

11. Another Lonely Christmas (Extended Version) – A-side, December 1984 US 45-single, Warner Brothers 20291

12. I Would Die 4 U (7" Single Edit) – A-side, November 1984 US 45-single on Warner Brothers 29121

13. I Would Die 4 U (Extended Version) – A-side, December 1984 US 45-single on Warner Brothers 20291

14. Baby I'm A Star (Edit) – B-side to "Take Me With U", January 1985 US 45-single on Warner Brothers 29079

15. Take Me With U (7" Single Edit) – A-side, January 1985 US 45-single on Warner Brothers 29079

 

DVD – Prince And The Revolution Live at the Carrier Dome, Syracuse, NY, 30 March 1985

1. Let's Go Crazy

2. Delirious

3. 1999

4. Little Red Corvette

5. Take Me With U

6. Do Me, Baby

7. Irresistible Bitch

8. Possessed

9. How Come U Don't Call Me Anymore

10. Let's Pretend We're Married

11. International Lover

12. God

13. Computer Blue

14. Darling Nikki

15. The Beautiful One

16. When Doves Cry

17. I Would Die 4 U

18. Baby I'm A Star

19. Purple Rain

 

On first glance the silver-foil-look multi-foldout-panel cardpack certainly looks the part - a Remaster of the original album overseen by prince at his Paisley Park studios - a chockers CD2 with unheard rarities which are actually worth hearing - a third CD of myriad 7" and 12" single versions (promos included) and the icing on the cake - a concert DVD that amply shows why he and his band (on form) were one of the greatest live draws in the world. But you quickly begin to realize that the 36-page booklet (pretty as it is) is a truncated variant of the much larger version in the 'Super Deluxe' Box set and only comments on the album - then nada. No debate or enlightenment for fans on any of the rest of it.

 

Audio Engineer SUSAN ROGERS opens the text with reminiscences of the album's making and Prince's impact not just on the R&B and Soul scene, but what crossover appeal "Purple Rain" gave Prince with the Rock Crowd who after "1999" had woken up to his brilliance. It was his fusion of Hendrix going wild on Guitar, Sly Stone getting Funky in the keyboard department and James Brown's band The JB's meets Motown's locked-in rhythm section The Funk Brothers letting rip with the back beat. Pretty much irresistible stuff and yet Prince felt new - like you just weren't sure he would go next.

 

There's a slew of suitably outrageous outtake photos but perhaps best of all is a song-by-song analysis by the musicians of The Revolution - Singer and Keyboardist Lisa Coleman, Guitarist and Vocalist Wendy Melvoin, Drummer Bobby Z, Bassist and Vocalist Brown Mark and Keyboardist and Vocalist Dr. Fink - all filling out the section called 'Fearlessly Breathe In The...Purple Rain - The Revolution Track-By-Track'. Immediately you're hit by their affection - the sense of good luck too that they were part of such an extraordinary ride. All tasty - but in the end it was always going to be about the Prince Remaster of the Album (CD1) and BERNIE GRUNDMAN handling the rest. While obvious big hitters like "When Doves Cry", "Purple Rain" and "Let's Go Crazy" will get the immediate attention - it's those album gems like the ballad "The Beautiful Ones" and the Funk-a-thon "Baby I'm A Star" that fans will love - suddenly lifted up out of the mire - instruments and moments swirling around your speakers. I love it.

 

But little (apart from his reputation) will prepare you for the gems and excesses on CD2 - a haul of unreleased - some of which Funk-U-Up for eleven and twelve minutes - the lady vocals start in "Our Destiny" that then segues into Prince taking over for "Roadhouse Garden" only to end the five-minute two-parter with the rip-roaring-est geetar solo you've ever heard - the kind of thing that Hendrix might note with a smirk in the great blue yonder. He does the same on the massively extended "Computer Blue" version - in fact its fading out and he's still punishing that guitar for even existing. Of the outtakes "Velvet Kitty Cat" and "Father's Song" impress and you can't help thinking that a five-minute edit of the Funk workout that is eleven-minute "The Dance Electric" could easily have made the album itself.

 

Directed by Paul Becher with the Audio also remastered by Bernie Grundman - the video concert shows his smarts by mixing in rarity material like "Do Me, Baby", "Possessed" and "Irresistible Bitch" into his live set thereby keeping uber-fans happy and the casual audience on its toes. The final three of "I Would Die 4 U", "Baby I'm A Star" and the epic "Purple Rain" show that fine line he tread - egotist, sexpot and genius too - and man did he know it.

 

Despite the annoyance of having a chunky booklet that doesn't actually tell you about the contents of its three CDs and 1DVD - this is a fabulous reissue and of course, my bank manager has booked cardiac-relief sessions as I now pursue the 'Super Deluxe Edition' because more of the same isn't just a good idea, but on the evidence presented here, damn near essential...

Friday, 10 March 2023

"Savage" by EURYTHMICS – November 1987 Seventh Album on RCA Records featuring Annie Lennox and Dave Stewart (November 2005 UK Sony/BMG 'Special Edition' CD Reissue and Remaster with Five Bonus Tracks, Deluxe Artwork Digipak Packaging and Ian Cooper Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...






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This Review and 209 more are in my E-Book
Available on AMAZON 

LET'S GO CRAZY - 80ts Music On CD

Your All-Genres Guide To Exceptional CD Reissues and Remasters
Classic Albums, Compilations, 45s
All In-Depth Reviews from the Discs Themselves
Over 1,650 e-Pages of Info
(No Cut and Paste Crap)

"...Eloquent With Rage..."
 
I was a huge fan of the EURYTHMICS and their sassy Synth-Pop - Annie Lennox and Dave Stewart hitting it out of the album/hit singles ball park more times than people cared to count.
 
They had hooks, cool, choruses and lyrics. In fact I wallowed in May 1985's "Be Yourself Tonight" (with guests like Aretha Franklin, Stevie Wonder, Elvis Costello and Mike Campbell of Tom Petty's Heartbreakers) and July 1986's follow-up "Revenge" with its 'Thorn In My Side' and 'The Miracle Of Love' melodies that swooped and moved. But man November 1987's "Savage" tested my patience - and if I'm totally honest and even on re-hearing the record via this fabulous 'Special Edition' CD Remaster from 2005 - it still does. 
 
"Savage" has always been described as their 'difficult' album, Annie on the cover looking like a darker trollop version of Kelly Reilly's 'Beth Dutton' from the Yellowstone TV Series after a night out battering poor chancer-men at the bar hoping for some love action with a babe way past their buckle belts. The slightly disheveled lipstick smeared Stepford Housewife vibe of the front cover continues with photos on the inside - Lennox all cleavage but her look - dead inside - and worse - hating what kind of woman she has become. And therein lies the anger that fuels the whole album, a woman who feels she shouldn't have arrived at this place of dancefloor compromise - ranting against unfaithful lovers with more than a few sinister thoughts in her weary head. Eloquent with rage...
 
This 'Special Edition' CD reissue and Expanded Edition Remaster (like all the others in the series) comes in Digipak 'Deluxe Packaging' with a beautifully presented 24-page colour booklet, five bonus tracks (B-sides and 12" mixes) and a muscular IAN COOPER Remaster done at Metropolis Studios from original master tapes. There's much to get Beethoven over...
 
UK released 14 November 2005 - "Savage" by EURYTHMICS on Sony / BMG Music Entertainment 82876 561192 (Barcode 828765611923) is an 'Special Edition' CD Reissue and Remaster with Five Bonus Tracks (Two Unreleased) and Expanded Packaging that plays out as follows (70:44 minutes):
 
1. Beethoven (I Love To Listen To) [Side 1]
2. I've Got A Lover (Back In Japan)
3. Do You Want To Break Up?
4. You Have Placed A Chill In My Heart
5. Shame  
6. Savage 
7. I Need A Man [Side 1]
8. Put The Blame On Me
9. Heaven
10. Wide Eyed Girl
11. I Need You
12. Brand New Day
Tracks 1 to 12 are their seventh studio album "Savage" - released November 1987 on RCA Records PL 71555 (LP) and PD 71555 (CD) and in the USA on RCA Victor 6794-1-R (LP) and RCA Victor 6794-2-R (CD). Produced by DAVE STEWART - it peaked at No. 7 in the UK and No. 41 in the USA. 

BONUS TRACKS:
13. Beethoven [Extended Philharmonic Version] - Taken from the 12" Version
14. Shame [Dance Mix] - Taken from the 12" Version
15. I Need A Man [Macho Mix] - Taken from the 12" Version
16. I Need You [Live] - PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED (no recording details)
17. Come Together - PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED

PHILL SAVIDGE provides the new liner notes in the colourful 24-page booklet that pictures the 45-single artwork for the album's four singles - "Beethoven (I Love To Listen To)", "You Have Placed A Chill In My Heart", "Shame" and "I Need A Man". Shame there are no lyrics, but it does look substantial and the IAN COOPER Remaster is fabulous - really clean and not too ramped up for the treble sake of it.
 
Can't say I ever dug "Beethoven..." but I did warm to the jaunty and fun "I've Got A Lover (Back In Japan)" and the spookily upbeat "Do You Want To Break Up". Faith is restored with three wickedly good Eurythmics tunes in a row - first being the strangely uplifting "You Have Placed A Chill In My Heart" (I recall I bought the CD single in some kind of tin packaging) and then "Shame" where Lennox name-checks the cinema, TV, theater and dancehalls - girls feeling the emotional longing and whiplash that follows. "All mockery is laughing, all violence is cheap..." are the lyrics printed on the cover of the booklet - taken directly from the album's title track "Savage". This is where their greatness come through - channeling all that hurt into riffage, techno beats and drum whacks (dig that brilliant guitar solo that lingers like the song does). You savage...brilliant.

I hated Side 2's "I Need A Man" - something not quite right about the way it's presented - all falsely upbeat that doesn't work. And they were clearly channeling their inner Prince with the flick-guitar funky "Put The Blame On Me" which might be one of the album's hidden gems. But my heart has always been with the whispering "Heaven" - a typically soothing Synth-Pop groove that hooks you in and won't let go. And it finishes on two I wasn't too enamored with either.
 
While I have major reservations about the album being a cohesive whole - bizarrely the five bonuses add loads to this reissue and punch up a 3-star release to 4. The 'Extended Philharmonic Version' of "Beethoven" runs to 4:31 minutes as opposed to the LP cut of 4:53 minutes. The less is more approach allows this wildly different almost Frankie Goes To Hollywood version morph into (for me) a more successful song. The 'Dance Mix' of "Shame" is just extended a tad (5:38 minutes as opposed to 4:28 minutes), echoes on the vocals and more Slapstick punches and Piano solo - but again I prefer it. Same goes for the 'Macho Mix' of the "I Need A Man" 12" single rather than the LP cut - it features more Stewart Guitar flourishes, more Lennox wild vocals and whacks that beat with a vengeance (5:55 minutes as opposed to the LP cut at 4:21 minutes). 
 
They then do an acoustic duet live on "I Need You" that strips down the menace of the song to two people sparring - it draws roars of approval from the audience. Then out of the blue - we get a Previously Unreleased cover of The Beatles' 'Abbey Road' opener "Come Together" done in a 'Beethoven' type Synth-Pop. Frankly I would have dug this on the album way more than the irritating 'bored audience' version of "I Need You". 

Annie may have been too tired to think about the dirty old dishes in the dirty old kitchen sink, but spare a thought for the good 'love' on this 'I just want someone to hold' Eighties brute. "Savage" has its admirers I know and this is the temple version of it they need to attend...

Thursday, 9 March 2023

"Steel Wheels" by THE ROLLING STONES – August 1989 Studio Album on Rolling Stones Records featuring Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Ron Wood, Bill Wyman, Charlie Watts, Chuck Leavell, Sarah Dash and Lisa Fischer, Matt Clifford, Phil Beer and more (June 2009 UK Polydor/Rolling Stones CD Reissue with Stephen Marcussen Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...

 


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This Review and 209 more are in my E-Book
Available on AMAZON 

LET'S GO CRAZY - 80ts Music On CD

Your All-Genres Guide To Exceptional CD Reissues and Remasters
Classic Albums, Compilations, 45s
All In-Depth Reviews from the Discs Themselves
Over 1,650 e-Pages of Info
(No Cut and Paste Crap)

"...Go For The Throat..."
 

"Your not the only one with mixed emotions...your not the only boat on the ocean..." Jagger roared on "Mixed Emotions" and my God was that true.

 

Not having had an album since the hugely derided and absolute career low-point "Dirty Work" in March 1986 - a full three years prior - many had thought that The Glimmer Twins were finished as a functioning band. But the brand and band 'The Rolling Stones' was bigger than all of their internal squabbles.

 

So with Mick Jagger and Keith Richards having gotten their solo-album itch out of their systems/scratched ("She's The Boss" in March 1985 for MJ and "Talk Is Cheap" in October 1988 for KR) - it was time to get back to business. Besides neither of their solo efforts were noticeably 'Rolling Stones' records - where one minute into the sheer Punk attitude and wild Keith Richards/Ron Wood 'Some Girls' guitar attack of "Hold On To Your Hat" and this is undeniably the swagger they were famous for - starling and even slightly dangerous for men of their vintage.

 

For most of us diehards, August 1989's "Steel Wheels" was a return to form and along with the decade's beginner "Tattoo You" in August 1981 - the only other album where almost all of it could be considered to be Classic Stones. Well produced, the twin guitar attacks up front, actually hearing Charlie Watts whacking his kit alongside girly backing vocals upping the choruses - it felt coherent and like they were out to prove a point. Hell, even the Keith Richards illicit attraction got-a-chill-with-you moment in "Can't Be Seen" (over on Side 2) is damn good (great geetar too). Which brings us the 2009 Polydor Remasters Series - all of which come in distinctive round-corner 'Super Jewel Cases'. Let's get to the Mixed Emotions...

 

UK released June 2009 - "Steel Wheels" by THE ROLLING STONES on Rolling Stones Records / Polydor 0620527015675 (Barcode 620527015675) is a Straightforward CD Reissue and Remaster (without Bonuses) of their 1989 LP that plays out as follows (53:03 minutes):

 

1. Sad Sad Sad [Side 1]

2. Mixed Emotions

3. Terrifying

4. Hold On To Your Hat

5. Hearts For Sale

6. Blinded By Love

7. Rock And A Hard Place [Side 2]

8. Can't Be Seen

9. Almost Hear You Sigh

10. Continental Drift

11. Break The Spell

12. Slipping Away

 Tracks 1 to 12 are their 19th British Album (21st USA) "Steel Wheels" - released 28 August 1989 on Rolling Stones Records 4657521 and 29 August 1989 in the UK on Rolling Stones Records/CBS Records 45333. Produced by THE GLIMMER TWINS (Mick Jagger and Keith Richards) - it peaked at No. 2 in the UK and No. 3 in the USA.

 

THE ROLLING STONES were:

Mick Jagger (Lead Vocals, Rhythm Guitar, Piano and Harmonica), Keith Richard (Lead and Rhythm Guitar - Lead Vocals on Track 8), Ron Wood (Lead and Rhythm Guitar), Bill Wyman (Bass) and Charlie Watts (Drums)

GUESTS included:

Chuck Leavell - Piano and Organ (Tracks 1, 2, 3, 6, 10)

Matt Clifford - Keyboards (Tracks 3, 5, 6, 10, 11, 12)

Phil Beer - Violin and Mandolin (Track 6)

The Master Magicians of Jajouka - African Instruments (Track 10)

The Kick Horns - Brass and Woodwinds (Tracks 1, 2, 7, 12)

Roddy Corimer - Trumpet (Track 3)

Luis Jardim - Percussion (Tracks 2, 6)

Sarah Dash and Lisa Fisher - Backing Vocals (Tracks 2, 7, 9, 10, 12)

Lisa Fisher only - Backing Vocals (Track 3)

Sinia Morgan and Tessa Niles - Backing Vocals (Track 10)

Bernard Fowler - Backing Vocals (Tracks 1, 2, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10)

 

The 'Super Jewel Case' looks nice as does the 'The Rolling Stones Remasters' Series Advert on the front, but the booklet is the same as the original release - an 8-page inlay with lyrics, musician credits and nowt else - damn shame. The big news however is a seriously muscular Remaster by STEPHEN MARCUSSEN that lifts an already well-produced album up by the bootstraps.

 

But as any fan will know who bought the CD singles in 1989 and 1990, we must mention what is NOT here. Three of those singles - "Rock And A Hard Place", "Mixed Emotions" and "Terrifying" had truly cool bluesy gems on their B-sides. 

 

"Cook Cook Blues", "Fancyman Blues" and the Howlin Wolf guitar-stylee "Wish I'd Never Met You" are wickedly good and had these been added as Bonuses (which they should have been) - I would have given this re-release five stars. I would suggest those curious for more, check out the 2005 Virgin CD compilation "Rarities 1971-2003" which has the second and third mentioned above along with other killer cuts including a corridors rehearsals/stadium live version composite of "Tumbling Dice" from the Voodoo Lounge 1995 period that is fantastic. That compilation also has the superbly Extended 12" Single Version of "Mixed Emotions" (from "Steel Wheels") done by Chris Kimsey (more muscle on the guitars, vocals, horns, piano – everything) which again could have been ace bonus material. But alas...back to the audio we do have for "Steel Wheel"...

 

This beast 'rawks' as they say in the vernacular - even the weird Middle Eastern/African Rhythms to "Continental Drift" over on Side 2 where The Stones attempt a Led Zeppelin 'No Quarter' moment of World Music meets Rock - sounds HUGE. The beauty in "Almost Hear You Sigh" is amazing - Charlie's drum whacks that open it - that lovely strummed guitar doubled with acoustic - both Chuck Leavell and Matt Clifford on complimentary keys - the five-strong chorus of voices (Richards, Woods and guests Bernard Folwer, Sarah Dash and Lisa Fischer) - the effect is huge, clear and moving.

 

The album's singles were obvious - catchy choruses in "Mixed Emotions", "Rock And A Hard Place", "Terrifying" and "Almost Hear You Say" - the most Radio-friendly Stones moments on the new album. But I love the wailing Harmonica and Guitar chug of "Break The Spell" and the beefcake 'we're back!' opener "Sad Sad Sad" - a vicious little "Exile On Main St." moment if ever there was one. And Keith returns for a second time on the album to provide the mellow finisher - "Slipping Away" - something would delight audiences on their myriad concert albums.

 

The inevitable live set followed in April 1991 "Flashpoint" - but it would not be until July 1994's "Voodoo Lounge" that any Stones fan took any real notice again. So there you have it - a 4-star album given a 5-star sound with a 3-star presentation. How very Rolling Stones!

INDEX - Entries and Artist Posts in Alphabetical Order