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Mona Bone Jakon

 
Album Review: Mona Bone Jakon

  • Artist: Cat Stevens
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: 1970 07
  • Total Time: 35:08
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Cat Stevens virtually disappeared from the British pop scene in 1968, at the age of 20, after a meteoric start to his career. He had contracted tuberculosis and spent a year recovering, from both his illness and the strain of being a teenage pop star, before returning to action in the spring of 1970 -- as a very different 22-year-old -- with Mona Bone Jakon. Fans who knew him from 1967 must have been surprised. Under the production aegis of former Yardbird Paul Samwell-Smith, he introduced a group of simple, heartfelt songs played in spare arrangements on acoustic guitars and keyboards and driven by a restrained rhythm section. Built on folk and blues structures, but with characteristically compelling melodies, Stevens' new compositions were tentative, fragmentary statements that alluded to his recent "Trouble," including the triviality of being a "Pop Star." But these were the words of a desperate man in search of salvation. Mona Bone Jakon was dominated by images of death, but the album was also about survival and hope. Stevens' craggy voice, with its odd breaks of tone and occasional huskiness, lent these sometimes sketchy songs depth, and the understated instrumentation further emphasized their seriousness. If Stevens was working out private demons on Mona Bone Jakon, he was well attuned to a similar world-weariness in pop culture. His listeners may not have shared his exact experience, but after the 1960s they certainly understood his sense of being wounded, his spiritual yearning, and his hesitant optimism. Mona Bone Jakon was only a modest success upon its initial release, but it attracted attention in the wake of the commercial breakthrough of its follow-up, Tea for the Tillerman. ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Lady d'Arbanville (Lyrics) Cat Stevens Cat Stevens (3:45)
Maybe You're Right (Lyrics) Cat Stevens Cat Stevens (3:25)
Pop Star (Lyrics) Cat Stevens Cat Stevens (4:13)
I Think I See the Light (Lyrics) Cat Stevens Cat Stevens (3:55)
Trouble (Lyrics) Cat Stevens Cat Stevens (2:49)
Mona Bone Jakon (Lyrics) Cat Stevens Cat Stevens (1:42)
I Wish, I Wish (Lyrics) Cat Stevens Cat Stevens (3:50)
Katmandu (Lyrics) Cat Stevens, Bob Seger Cat Stevens (3:22)
Time (Lyrics) Cat Stevens Cat Stevens (1:26)
Fill My Eyes (Lyrics) Cat Stevens Cat Stevens (3:00)
Lilywhite (Lyrics) Cat Stevens Cat Stevens (3:41)

Credits

Harvey Burns (Percussion), Cat Stevens (Guitar), John Ryan (Bass), Cat Stevens (Arranger), Bill Levenson (Reissue Supervisor), Cat Stevens (Vocals), Paul Samwell-Smith (Audio Production), Beth Stempel (Reissue Coordinator), Del Newman (Arranger), Paul Samwell-Smith (Producer), Cat Stevens (Keyboards), Alun Davies (Guitar), Ted Jensen (Mastering), Michael Bobak (Audio Engineer), Cat Stevens (Illustrations), Peter Gabriel (Flute)
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Wikipedia: Mona Bone Jakon
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Mona Bone Jakon
Studio album by Cat Stevens
Released April 1, 1970
Recorded January - February 1970,
Olympic Studios, London;
Abbey Road Studios, London
Genre Folk Rock
Pop
Rock
Length 35:15
Label A&M (U.S.)
Island (UK)
Producer Paul Samwell-Smith
Professional reviews
Cat Stevens chronology
New Masters
(1967)
Mona Bone Jakon
(1970)
Tea for the Tillerman
(1970)
Back Cover
Mona Bone Jakon back cover

Mona Bone Jakon is an album by singer/songwriter Cat Stevens. The album was released on April 1, 1970 on the A&M record label in the United States, and the Island record label in the United Kingdom. After a meteoric start to his career, Stevens virtually disappeared from the British pop scene in October 1968. Mona Bone Jakon is notable not only for his return, but for the emergence of a very different artist.

Contents

Background

Prior to recording Mona Bone Jakon, Stevens was a British teenage pop star with the hit singles "I Love My Dog", "Matthew and Son" and "I'm Gonna Get Me a Gun".

For much of 1969 Stevens was recovering from tuberculosis. After his recovery, Stevens negotiated out of his contract with Deram Records and partnered with former Yardbirds member Paul Samwell-Smith to introduce a simple, emotionally straightforward sound, with songs played in spare arrangements on acoustic guitars and keyboards and driven by a restrained rhythm section built from second guitarist Alun Davies, bassist John Ryan, and drummer Harvey Burns—and on one song, "Katmandu", Peter Gabriel on the flute.

The songs themselves were darker in tone: the madrigal-inspired ballad "Lady D'Arbanville" elevated the tragedy of a lost lover in question (in this case, Stevens' former girlfriend Patti D'Arbanville) to that of a deceased one; "Trouble" was a plea to stave off death; "Pop Star" showcased Stevens' dramatic change in voice by satirizing the triviality of celebrity.

Though "Lady D'Arbanville" would reach #8 on the British charts, Mona Bone Jakon was only a modest success upon its initial release. The album attracted attention, however, in the wake of the commercial breakthrough of its follow-up, Tea for the Tillerman, and with the inclusion of three of its songs ("Trouble", "I Wish, I Wish", and "I Think I See the Light") in Hal Ashby and Colin Higgins's black comedy Harold and Maude in 1971.

Origin of title

According to Stevens, the inspiration for the title was a name he created to describe his penis:

""Mona Bone Jakon" is another name for my penis. It's the name I give it. It's not some sort of secret vocabulary, it's just something I made up."[1]

Track listing

All songs written by Cat Stevens.

Side one

  1. "Lady D'Arbanville" – 3:45
  2. "Maybe You're Right" – 3:25
  3. "Pop Star" – 4:13
  4. "I Think I See the Light" – 3:55
  5. "Trouble" – 2:49

Side two

  1. "Mona Bone Jakon" – 1:42
  2. "I Wish, I Wish" – 3:50
  3. "Katmandu" – 3:22
  4. "Time" – 1:26
  5. "Fill My Eyes" – 3:00
  6. "Lilywhite" – 3:41

Personnel

  • Cat Stevens – guitar, piano, keyboards, drums, strings, vocals
  • Alun Davies – guitar, backing vocals
  • John Ryan – bass
  • Nicky Hopkins - bass, keyboards
  • Harvey Burns – drums, percussion
  • Peter Gabriel – flute on "Katmandu"
  • Del Newman - strings, arrangements

Production

Charts

Album

Year Chart Position
1971 Pop Albums 164

Singles

Year Single Chart Position
1970 Lady D'Arbanville Pop Singles 8

Certifications

Organization Level Date
RIAA – USA Gold January 15, 1976

Notes

  1. ^ "Popmusique interview c. 1972". Majcat - Cat Stevens scrapbook. http://www.majicat.com/articles/popmusique.htm. Retrieved 2008-03-22. [dead link]

 
 

 

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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
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Mona Bone Jakon" Read more

 

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