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Last Man Standing

 
Album Review: Last Man Standing

  • Artist: Jerry Lee Lewis
  • Rating: StarStarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: September 26, 2006
  • Genre: Rock

Review

It often seems like there are only two ways for rock, country, and blues veterans to launch comebacks when they're senior citizens: confront mortality head on or surround yourself with superstar guests to help carry you through a half-hearted stroll through your back catalog, scattering a few new tunes along the way. At first glance, Jerry Lee Lewis' Last Man Standing seems to fall into both categories: the title suggests that Jerry Lee is in the mood to take a long look back, and certainly the very concept of the album -- pairing Lewis with 21 other stars for a succession of duets, often on material that his guests either wrote or made famous -- seems like a typical superstar duet record. But the Killer has never been predictable, and nowhere is that truer than it is here, where Jerry Lee treats Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, John Fogerty, Bruce Springsteen, Jimmy Page, and 16 other stars as he treated the Nashville Teens at the Star Club in 1964 -- as game amateurs who have to sprint to keep up with the master. This is the only guest-studded superstar album where all the guests bend to the will of the main act, who dominates the proceedings in every conceivable way. Jerry Lee doesn't just run the guests ragged; he turns their songs inside out, too -- and nowhere is that clearer than on the opening "Rock and Roll," the Led Zeppelin classic that is now stripped of its signature riff and sounds as if it were a lost gem dug out of the Sun vaults. Far from struggling with this, Jimmy Page embraces it, following the Killer as he runs off on his own course -- he turns into support, and the rest of other 20 guests follow suit (with the possible exception of Kid Rock, who sounds like the party guest who won't go home on an otherwise strong version of "Honky Tonk Woman").

The label might sell Last Man Standing on the backs of the duet partners -- after all, it's awful hard to drum up interest in a record by a 71-year-old man no matter how great he is, so you need a hook like superstars -- but the album by no stretch of the imagination belongs to them. This is completely Jerry Lee's show from the second that he calls out, "It's been a long time since I rock & rolled," at the beginning of the record -- and those are true words, since he hasn't rocked on record in a long, long time. Ten years ago he cut the Andy Paley-produced Young Blood, but that was a typically tasteful self-conscious comeback record; it was driven as much by the producer's conception of the artist as it was the artist himself. The opposite is true here, where the production is simple and transparent, never interfering with the performances; it has the welcome effect of making it sound like there is simply no way to tame Jerry Lee, even though he's now in his seventies. And that doesn't mean that this is merely a hard-rocking record, although "Rock and Roll," "Pink Cadillac," and "Travelin' Band" do indeed rock harder than anything he's done since the '70s -- so hard that they stand proudly next to his classic Sun records, even if they don't have the unbridled fire of those peerless sides. No, this album touches on everything that Jerry Lee has done musically through his career, as the furious rock & roll is balanced by pure hardcore country, piledriving boogie-woogie, rambling blues, old-timey folk songs, and, especially, reinterpretations of familiar songs that are so thoroughly reimagined they seem like they were written specifically for Jerry Lee. And he does this the same way he's always done it: by singing and playing the hell out of the songs. His phrasing remains original and unpredictable, twisting phrases in unexpected ways -- and, yes, throwing his name into the mix frequently, too -- and his piano is equally vigorous and vital. This is a record that stays true to his music, and in doing so, it's not so much a comeback as it is a summation: a final testament from a true American original, one that explains exactly why he's important. But that makes Last Man Standing sound too serious, as if it were one of those self-consciously morbid Johnny Cash records -- no, this is a record that celebrates life, both in its joys and sorrows, and it's hard not to see it as nothing short of inspiring. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Rock and Roll John Bonham, Robert Plant, John Paul Jones, Jimmy Page Jerry Lee Lewis, Jimmy Page (2:14)
Before the Night Is Over Jerry Lee Lewis, B.B. King (3:39)
Pink Cadillac Bruce Springsteen Bruce Springsteen, Jerry Lee Lewis (3:55)
Evening Gown Mick Jagger Mick Jagger, Jerry Lee Lewis, Ronnie Wood (3:57)
You Don't Have to Go Jimmy Reed Jerry Lee Lewis, Neil Young (4:00)
Twilight (Lyrics) Jaime Robbie Robertson Robbie Robertson, Jerry Lee Lewis (2:48)
Travelin' Band (Lyrics) John Fogerty John Fogerty, Jerry Lee Lewis (2:01)
That Kind of Fool (Lyrics) Mack Vickery Jerry Lee Lewis, Keith Richards (4:14)
Sweet Little Sixteen Chuck Berry Ringo Starr, Jerry Lee Lewis (3:04)
Just a Bummin' Around Merle Haggard, Jerry Lee Lewis (2:43)
Honky Tonk Woman (Lyrics) Mick Jagger, Keith Richards Jerry Lee Lewis, Kid Rock (2:21)
What's Made Milwaukee Famous (Lyrics) Glenn Sutton Jerry Lee Lewis, Rod Stewart (2:39)
Don't Be Ashamed of Your Age Bob Wills, Cindy Walker George Jones, Jerry Lee Lewis (1:59)
Couple More Years Dennis Locorriere, Shel Silverstein Willie Nelson, Jerry Lee Lewis (5:13)
Ol' Glory Jerry Lee Lewis, Paul Robert, Shelby Darnell Jerry Lee Lewis, Toby Keith (2:05)
Trouble in Mind (Lyrics) Richard M. Jones Jerry Lee Lewis, Eric Clapton (3:49)
I Saw Her Standing There John Lennon, Paul McCartney Little Richard, Jerry Lee Lewis (2:21)
Lost Highway (Lyrics) Leo Payne Delaney Bramlett, Jerry Lee Lewis (2:59)
Hadacol Boogie Bill Nettles Jerry Lee Lewis, Buddy Guy (3:18)
What Makes the Irish Heart Beat Van Morrison Jerry Lee Lewis, Don Henley (4:12)
The Pilgrim Kris Kristofferson Kris Kristofferson, Jerry Lee Lewis (3:00)

Credits

Robbie Robertson (Guitar), Roland Janes (Engineer), John Fogerty (Vocals), June Murakawa (Mixing Assistant), Bobby Cunningham (Bass), Merle Haggard (Vocals), Delaney Bramlett (Vocals), Jimmy Rip (Overdub Engineer), John Saylor (Overdub Engineer), Little Richard (Vocals), Stephen Marcussen (Mastering), Jesse Burden (Design), Willie Nelson (Guitar), Toby Scott (Overdub Engineer), Ivan Neville (Organ), Lou Bradley (Overdub Engineer), Willie Nelson (Vocals), Brandy Jones (Vocals (Background)), Bernard Fowler (Vocals (Background)), Jimmy Rip (Stomping), June Murakawa (Overdub Engineer), Keith Allison (Guitar), Robbie Robertson (Overdub Engineer), Peter Guralnick (Liner Notes), Jimmy Rip (Producer), Jimmy Rip (Percussion), James Saez (Overdub Engineer), Jerry Lee Lewis (Piano), Jimmy Page (Guitar), Ringo Starr (Vocals), Dan Leffler (Overdub Engineer), Mick Jagger (Vocals), Jerry Lee Lewis (Organ), Jenice Heo (Design), Gary Burden (Design), Jimmy Rip (Clapping), Don Henley (Vocals), Ivan Neville (Organ (Hammond)), Jimmy Rip (Fiddle), Jimmy Rip (Finger Snaps), Jimmy Rip (Digital Editing), Neil Young (Vocals), Bill Strom (Organ), Rod Stewart (Vocals), Eric Clapton (Guitar), James Stroud (Drums), J. Carter Tutwiler (Overdub Engineer), Jim Keltner (Percussion), Gary Burden (Art Direction), Steve Gamberoni (Overdub Engineer), David Cambell (String Arrangements), Neil Young (Guitar), Mickey Raphael (Harmonica), Michael Muller (Photography), Jewell Jones (Vocals (Background)), Kid Rock (Vocals), Phyllis Duncan (Vocals (Background)), Jenice Heo (Cover Image), Toby Keith (Vocals), Paddy Maloney (Whistle (Human)), James "Hutch" Hutchinson (Bass), Jerry Lee Lewis (Vocals), Jim Keltner (Drums), Merle Haggard (Whistle (Human)), Tom Nikosey (Hand Lettering), Steve Gamberoni (Mixing), Jimmy Rip (Mixing), David Woodford (Saxophone), Kris Kristofferson (Vocals), Bruce Springsteen (Vocals), Steve Bing (Producer), Jenice Heo (Art Direction), James Saez (Mixing), Kenneth Lovelace (Guitar), Richard Hanson (Overdub Engineer), James Saez (Engineer), Paddy Maloney (Pipe), Steve Gamberoni (Engineer), B.B. King (Guitar), Boo Macleod (Overdub Engineer), Dave Woodruff (Saxophone), Ronnie Wood (Pedal Steel), Jim Keltner (Finger Snaps), Dave Rouze (Overdub Engineer), Jimmy Rip (Guitar)
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Wikipedia: Last Man Standing (Jerry Lee Lewis album)
Top
Last Man Standing
Studio album by Jerry Lee Lewis
Released September 26, 2006
Recorded Phillips Studio and Sun Studio in Memphis, Tennessee and various other studios
Genre Rock
Rock 'n' Roll
Country
Length 66:43 (excluding bonus tracks)
Label Artists First Records
Producer Jimmy Rip
Steve Bing
Professional reviews

Last Man Standing is an album released by Jerry Lee Lewis in September 2006. The album consists of duets between Lewis and some of the biggest names in music, past and present. The title derives from the generation of 1950's Sun Studios recording artists such as Johnny Cash, Roy Orbison, Charlie Rich, Carl Perkins, and Elvis Presley, all of whom have died, leaving Lewis the "last man standing".

Contents

Track listing

  1. "Rock and Roll" (John Paul Jones, John Bonham, James Patrick Page, Robert Plant) – 2:14
  2. "Before the Night Is Over" (Benjamin Peters) – 3:39
    • With B. B. King
  3. "Pink Cadillac" (Bruce Springsteen) – 3:55
    • With Bruce Springsteen
  4. "Evening Gown" (Mick Jagger) – 3:57
  5. "You Don't Have to Go" (James Matcher Reed) – 4:00
  6. "Twilight" (Robbie Robertson) – 2:48
    • With Robbie Robertson
  7. "Travelin' Band" (John Fogerty) – 2:01
    • With John Fogerty
  8. "That Kind of Fool" (Mack Vickery) – 4:14
  9. "Sweet Little 16" (Chuck Berry) – 3:04
  10. "Just a Bummin' Around" (Pete Graves) – 2:43
  11. "Honky Tonk Woman" (Jagger/Richards) – 2:21
  12. "What's Made Milwaukee Famous (Has Made a Loser Out of Me)" (Glenn Sutton) – 2:39
  13. "Don't Be Ashamed of Your Age" (Cindy Walker, Bob Wills) – 1:59
  14. "A Couple More Years" (Dennis Locorriere, Shel Silverstein) – 5:13
  15. "Old Glory" (Paul Roberts, Shelby Darnell, Lewis) – 2:05
  16. "Trouble in Mind" (Richard M. Jones) – 3:49
  17. "I Saw Her Standing There" (John Lennon, Paul McCartney) – 2:21
  18. "Lost Highway" (Leon Payne) – 2:59
  19. "Hadacohl Boogie" (Bill Nettles) – 3:18
  20. "What Makes the Irish Heart Beat" (Van Morrison) – 4:12
  21. "The Pilgrim Ch. 33" (Kris Kristofferson) – 3:00
    • With Kris Kristofferson

Bonus tracks

The album was released with several promotional download-only tracks depending on the venue at which the album was purchased. For physical retail outlets, the bonus track was available from their official web site.

  • "Before the Night Is Over" (Rhapsody)
  • "Bright Lights, Big City" (Wal-Mart)
  • "Don't Put No Headstones on My Grave" (iTunes)
  • "I Don't Want to Be Lonely Tonight" (URGE)
  • "Last Cheaters' Waltz" (Target)
  • "Mexicali Rose" (Country Music Television)
  • "Trouble in Mind" (Napster)
  • "Why You Been Gone So Long?" (Best Buy)
  • "You Belong to Me" (Best Buy)
  • "A Couple More Years - Live

Personnel

In addition to the guest stars, the album features Kenny Lovelace and producer Jimmy Rip on guitar, Hutch Hutchinson on bass, and Jim Keltner playing drums. The liner notes were written by Peter Guralnick.

Unreleased songs

Lewis recorded several more songs for the album than were released, including:

Chart positions

Chart October 5, 2006 October 12, 2006 October 19, 2006 October 26, 2006
Billboard 200 1 1 3 9
Billboard Top Country Albums 9 8 4 2
Top Rock Albums 4 1 2 9
Top Independent Albums 1 1 3 5
Top Internet Albums 26 9 13 7
Top Sellers cduniverse.som 1 4 17 27
Top Sellers amazon.com 2 12 27 36
Top Sellers barnesandnoble.com 8 15 21 13

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

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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