четверг, 10 апреля 2014 г.
Sadly, Orbison died and the result was the Wilburys never quite measured up to an outstanding debut.
Pound for pound, the Traveling Wilburys contained more sheer musical genius than a Lollapalooza of lesser bands. A Beatle, a Dylan, a Heartbreaker, a legendary voice and an Electric Light Orchestrator? It sounds like rock star fantasy camp, but it was reality nearly 20 years ago now.
The combination of George Harrison, Bob Dylan, Tom Petty, Roy Orbison and Jeff Lynne made for one of the finest supergroups of all time. Their first album, The Traveling Wilburys Vol. 1 , and to a lesser extent, their second, teasingly labeled Vol. 3, represent a shining high point in each of the artists careers.
Shamefully, these discs have been out of print and fetching high prices on eBay for years now. Rhino Records has now repaired the situation by reissuing the Wilburys two discs, remastered and with bonus tracks, and paired with a new retrospective DVD. All I can say is, it s about time.
The Wilburys sprang out of sessions for Harrison s 1987 comeback disc Cloud Nine . In 1988, Harrison and Lynne were putting together a B-side for the single air tickets This Is Love at Dylan s home studio. Roy Orbison and Tom Petty just happened to be hanging about, and the five slapped together a little song.
But the result, Handle With Care, was far from a mere B-side catchy, wistful, anchored by Harrison s sweet guitar solos, the crooning chorus from Orbison, Dylan popping up to blow a harmonica and croak a few lines like a subterranean oracle. It had the ramshackle feeling of a road trip anthem, the universal appeal of a forgotten classic rock tune, and it was way too good to toss away as filler. The group reconvened to record an entire album. Legend has it that Wilburys was coined by Harrison and Lynne during the recording of Cloud Nine as a reference to recorded flubs that could be eliminated during the mixing stage (as in, We ll bury them in the mix ).
The goofy in-jokes continued right into the album itself, where despite their pictures being on the cover, air tickets the band members took on pseudonyms air tickets as Wilburys i.e. Dylan became Lucky Wilbury, and so on. Although it was a loosely organized throwaway record written and recorded in just 10 days the sum was greater than the solo careers of some of the men at this time.
Even Dylan, who one would imagine the least likely of the quintet to take part in such a goofy lark, seemed to have a blast the charmingly lovelorn Dirty World, or his Tweeter and the Monkeyman, a rollicking Springsteen-meets-Bob air tickets parody that s light years above most of Dylan s other 80s output. Orbison hadn t had a real hit in decades, and this disc helped launch the career revival that came too late he died suddenly at age 52 in 1988 mere months after the recording of this set. Some of his tracks here, like the lovely Not Alone Any More, stand with the best of his work.
What was so remarkable air tickets about Vol. 1 is that it s a supergroup album almost air tickets entirely lacking in pretension just simply gorgeous, honest soundcraft, polished to a fine shine by Jeff Lynne s typically slick production. Everyone takes turns on vocals and songwriting, and the result is that no one artist pulls rank on the others. The sonic touch was also present on the Lynne-engineered albums of the time, Harrison s Cloud Nine and Petty s Full Moon Fever In fact, both of those albums featured air tickets cameos by other Wilburys and are almost continuations of the Wilbury sound.
Sadly, Orbison died and the result was the Wilburys never quite measured air tickets up to an outstanding debut. The remaining four did regroup for 1990 s follow-up. With more of that quirky Wilbury humor their second album was labeled Vol. 3, confusing fans forevermore. Vol. 3 unfortunately was more like what Vol. 1 could ve been solid, but somewhat unmemorable, a lark without heft. The operatic voice of Orbison was a key part of the first record s appeal, lending a lovelorn grandeur to many of the songs. He s sorely air tickets missed. Songs like She s My Baby or Wilbury Twist are good-time rock n roll, but there s something missing. The relaxed spontaneity of the first album is a little more forced here, proving that maybe you can t always repeat a winner. Still, the Wilburys never embarrassed themselves.
Vol. III, quite frankly, is pretty bad. Harrison s contributions are minimal; Dylan is doing hackwork; Petty is OK, but he s still only Petty; and Jeff Lynne is, as usual, stuck in his same-sounding production mode. Man that guy is consistent to a fault.
Would somebody air tickets please post the original planned unused b side version of The Traveling Wilburys Handle With Care as soon as possible on YouTube I demand to listen to it what it sounded like right now, thank you.
The Wretched air tickets of the Earth: Hidden Dimensions in Fanon's Thought - Part 1, Economic Development - 72 comments TV Review: 'Once Upon a Time' - 'Quiet Minds' - 27 comments Stephen Colbert and Asian-Americans: The Standing to Be Satirical - 22 comments Anticipating 'Once Upon a Time' - 'The Tower' - 21 comments TV Review: 'Supernatural' - 'Blade Runners' - 10 comments
Roxe Anne Peacock on Restaurant Review: air tickets Healthy Fast-Food Dining at Noodles Company air tickets Vicki on Restaurant Review: Healthy Fast-Food Dining at Noodles air tickets Company Toxovaginapaloxis on Ken Doll Syndrome air tickets 5'5" on Ten Things I Hate About Tom Cruise Sami on PlayStation 4 Review: Infamous Second Son
Подписаться на:
Комментарии к сообщению (Atom)
Комментариев нет:
Отправить комментарий