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Dream Harder

 
Album Review: Dream Harder

  • Artist: The Waterboys
  • Rating: StarStar
  • Release Date: May 25, 1993
  • Total Time: 43:33
  • Genre: Rock

Review

After two albums of neo-traditional Irish music, Mike Scott brings The Waterboys back to the big rock sound of earlier albums like This is the Sea. Coming after the remarkably accomplished Fishermen's Blues and Room to Roam, Dream Harder is a bit of a disappointment. Its best material doesn't carry the same weight as compositions from Blues -- compare the simple beauty of Fishermen's Blues' "Has Anyone Hear Seen Hank" to Dream Harder's overblown "The Return of Jimi Hendrix." Scott can still bang out some good songs, but on Dream Harder there aren't as many as on previous efforts. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
The New Life Mike Scott The Waterboys (5:08)
Glastonbury Song (Lyrics) Mike Scott The Waterboys (3:43)
Preparing to Fly (Lyrics) Mike Scott The Waterboys (4:34)
The Return of Pan Mike Scott The Waterboys (4:19)
Corn Circles (Lyrics) Mike Scott The Waterboys (4:05)
Suffer (Lyrics) Mike Scott The Waterboys (3:49)
Winter Winter (Lyrics) Mike Scott The Waterboys (:33)
Love and Death Mike Scott, William Butler Yeats The Waterboys (2:44)
Spiritual City (Lyrics) Mike Scott The Waterboys (3:11)
Wonders of Lewis (Lyrics) Mike Scott The Waterboys (2:04)
The Return of Jimi Hendrix Mike Scott, Anthony Thistlethwaite The Waterboys (5:48)
Good News (Lyrics) Mike Scott The Waterboys (3:35)

Credits

Jules Shear (Vocals (Background)), The Waterboys (Main Performer), Billy Connolly (Voices), Jim Keltner (Drums), Kenny Aaronson (Bass), Kenny Aaronson (Drums), Tawatha Agee (Vocals (Background)), Laura Lee Ash (Vocals (Background)), Carla Azar (Bass), Carla Azar (Drums), Bashiri Johnson (Conga), Bashiri Johnson (Drums), Bashiri Johnson (Tambourine), Bashiri Johnson (Shaker), Bashiri Johnson (Talking Drum), Joe Blaney (Engineer), Niko Bolas (Engineer), Chris Bruce (Guitar), Chris Bruce (Guitar (Rhythm)), Darvin M.D. Buachman (Vocals (Background)), Thom Cadley (Assistant Engineer), Bruce Calder (Assistant Engineer), James Campagnola (Saxophone), Roger Greenawalt (Vocals (Background)), Lolly Grodner (Assistant Engineer), Steve Holly (Bass), Steve Holly (Drums), Caroline LaVelle (Cello), George Marino (Mastering), Patrick McCarthy (Engineer), Cindy Mizelle (Vocals (Background)), Jerry Peters (Percussion), Fiona Prendergast (Vocals (Background)), Bill Price (Producer), Bill Price (Engineer), Bill Price (Mixing), Thommy Price (Bass), Thommy Price (Drums), Ljubisa "Lubi" Ristic (Sitar), Mike Scott (Guitar), Mike Scott (Percussion), Mike Scott (Guitar (Rhythm)), Mike Scott (Keyboards), Mike Scott (Vocals), Mike Scott (Producer), Pal Shazar (Vocals (Background)), Pal Shazar (Paintings), Brian Stanley (Bass), Brian Stanley (Drums), George Stathos (Clarinet), George Stathos (?), Fonzi Thornton (Vocals (Background)), Scott Thunes (Bass), Scott Thunes (Drums), Carl Glanville (Assistant Engineer), Andy Smith (Assistant Engineer), John Jackson (Assistant Engineer), Michael White (Engineer), Rory Romano (Assistant Engineer), Tom Zutaut (Art Direction), Tom Zutaut (Repertoire), Frank Olinsky (Art Direction), Michael Halsband (Photography), Dan Gellert (Assistant Engineer), John Hardin (Photography), Willie Mannion (Engineer), Geoff Archuletta (Assistant Engineer), Darwin Buschman M.D. (Vocals (Background)), Terry Wetmore (Vocals (Background))
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Wikipedia: Dream Harder
Top
Dream Harder
Studio album by The Waterboys
Released May 1993
Recorded New York, New York
Genre Rock
Length 43:33
Label Geffen
Producer Mike Scott
Professional reviews
The Waterboys chronology
Room to Roam
(1990)
Dream Harder
(1993)
The Live Adventures of the Waterboys
(2000)

Dream Harder is an album released in 1993 credited to The Waterboys, but recorded by Mike Scott with session musicians.[1] It was the last album before the band went on a seven year hiatus while Scott pursued a formal solo career, with Bring 'em All In (1995) and Still Burning (1997). The album reached position one-hundred and seventy-one on the Billboard Top 200 charts, surpassing the previous Waterboys album Room to Roam, in spite of a less-than-enthusiastic response from critics to the album's sound.[2]

The album art was provided by the photography of Michael Halsband and John Hardin and the painting of Pal Shazar, under the direction of Frank Olinsky and Tom Zutaut.

Dream Harder was a return to a rock, or even hard rock, sound after the traditional Celtic-influenced preceding two albums. It did, however, continue The Waterboys' tradition of arranging a William Butler Yeats poem, in this case "Love And Death". "The Return of Pan" is The Waterboys' second ode to the Greek deity, and the album contains a number of references to the romantic Neopaganism of Dion Fortune and the mystical Christianity of C. S. Lewis, as well as a tribute to guitarist Jimi Hendrix.

Contents

Songs

"The New Life", one of many Scott songs which are both optimistic and touch upon spirituality, contains a phrase "Are you under the mercy?", which Scott explains as "a phrase I nicked from a Christian fan who wrote me a letter and signed off with "under the mercy", which I took to mean (and this is what I intended in the song) "under the mercy of spirit/the sacred/the presence of love" - though Christians would say under the mercy of Christ".[3]

"Glastonbury Song" was released as a single, backed by the songs "Chalice Hill", "Burlington Bertie And Accrington Stanley", and "Corn Circle Symphony". Scott, discussing the song in 2003, described the song as "one of the most commercial, radio-friendly songs musically that I've ever produced", and ascribes its lack of success to its theme, "..the chorus is 'I just found God where He always was'... In many countries it was successful, but in Britain, they wouldn't play it because of the chorus.".[4] James Heflin, the interviewer, notes that the song reached the Top 30 in the UK and was performed live on the BBC.[4]

"The Return of Pan" was also released as a single, with the songs "Karma" (also the name of one of Scott's earlier musical projects), "Mister Powers" and an untitled track. "The Return of Pan"'s lyrics recount an episode from Plutarch's "The Obsolescence of Oracles".[5] Plutarch writes that, during the reign of Tiberius, a sailor named Thamus heard the following shouted to him from land; "Thamus, are you there? When you reach Palodes, take care to proclaim that the great god Pan is dead." After retelling the story, the singer of "The Return of Pan" insists that "The Great God Pan is alive!". The single charted at position twenty-four on the UK singles chart May 1993.

"Love and Death" is a poem by William Butler Yeats. It first appeared in the 1885 Dublin University Review.

Track listing

Pan, shown here in sculpture by Heliodoros of Rhodes, was also referenced in "The Pan Within" on This Is the Sea.

Tracks written by Mike Scott, except where noted.

  1. "The New Life" – 5:08
  2. "Glastonbury Song" – 3:43
  3. "Preparing to Fly" – 4:34
  4. "The Return of Pan" – 4:19
  5. "Corn Circles" – 4:05
  6. "Suffer" – 3:49
  7. "Winter Winter" – 0:33
  8. "Love and Death" (words: William Butler Yeats, music: Scott) – 2:44
  9. "Spiritual City" – 3:11
  10. "Wonders of Lewis" – 2:04
  11. "The Return of Jimi Hendrix" (words: Scott, music: Scott / Anthony Thistlethwaite / Jim Keltner) – 5:48
  12. "Good News" – 3:35

Personnel

Notes and references

External links


 
 
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Mike Scott (Rock Artist, '90s)
BBM (Rock Band, '90s)
A Rock in the Weary Land (2000 Album by The Waterboys)

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Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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