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Songs for a Tailor

 
Album Review: Songs for a Tailor

  • Artist: Jack Bruce
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: 1969
  • Total Time: 31:43
  • Genre: Rock

Review

With a live version of "Crossroads" going Top 30 for Cream, Songs for a Tailor was released in 1969, showing many more sides of Jack Bruce. George Harrison (again using his L'Angelo Misterioso moniker) appears on the first track, "Never Tell Your Mother She's Out of Tune," though his guitar is not as prominent as the performance on "Badge." The song is bass heavy with Colosseum members Dick Heckstall-Smith and Jon Hiseman providing a different flavor to what Bruce fans had become accustomed to. Hiseman drums on eight of the ten compositions, including "Theme From an Imaginary Western," the second track, and Jack Bruce's greatest hit that never charted. With "just" Chris Spedding on guitar and Jon Hiseman on drums, Bruce paints a masterpiece performing the bass, piano, organ, and vocals. The song is so significant it was covered by Mountain, Colosseum, and a Colosseum spin-off, Greenslade. One has to keep in mind that the influential Blind Faith album was being recorded this same year (and according to the late Jimmy Miller, producer of that disc, Jack Bruce filled in for Rick Grech on some of the Blind Faith material). Bruce's omnipresence on the charts and in the studio gives the diversity on Songs for a Tailor that much more intrigue. "Tickets to Water Falls" and "Weird of Hermiston" feature the Hiseman/Spedding/Bruce trio, and though the wild abandon of Ginger Baker is replaced by Hiseman's jazz undercurrents, these are still basically two- to three-and-a-half-minute songs, not as extended as the material on Bruce's work on his John McLaughlin/Heckstall-Smith/Hiseman disc Things We Like recorded a year before this, but released two years after Songs for a Tailor in 1971. The history is important because this album is one of the most unique fusions of jazz with pop and contains less emphasis on the blues, a genre so essential to Bruce's career. Indeed, "Theme From an Imaginary Western" is total pop. It is to Jack Bruce what "Midnight Rider" is to Greg Allman, a real defining moment. "Rope Ladder to the Moon" has that refreshing sparkle found on "Tickets to Water Falls" and "Weird of Hermiston," but Bruce has only John Marshall on drums and producer Felix Pappalardi adding some vocals while he provides cellos, vocals, guitar, piano, and bass. Side two goes back to the thick progressive sound of the first track on side one, and has a lot in common with another important album from this year, Janis Joplin's I Got Dem Ol' Kozmic Blues Again Mama! Jack Bruce and Janis Joplin were two of the most familiar superstar voices on radio performing hard blues-pop. Joplin added horns to augment her expression the same time Jack Bruce was mixing saxes and trumpets to three tracks of this jazz/pop exploration. "He the Richmond" deviates from that, throwing a curve with Bruce on acoustic guitar, Pappalardi on percussion, and Marshall slipping in again on drums. But the short one minute and 44 second "Boston Ball Game, 1967" proves the point about the pop/jazz fusion succinctly and is a nice little burst of creativity. "To Isengard" has Chris Spedding, Felix Pappalardi, and Jack Bruce on acoustic guitars, a dreamy folk tune until Hiseman's drums kick in on some freeform journey, Spedding's guitar sounding more like the group Roxy Music, which he would eventually join as a sideman, over the total jazz of the bass and drums. "The Clearout" has Spedding, Hiseman, and Bruce end the album with progressive pop slightly different from the other recordings here. As with 1971's Harmony Row, Peter Brown composed all the lyrics on Songs for a Tailor with Jack Bruce writing the music. A lyric sheet is enclosed and displays the serious nature of this project. It is picture perfect in construction, performance, and presentation. ~ Joe Viglione, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Never Tell Your Mother She's Out of Tune Jack Bruce Jack Bruce (3:41)
Theme for an Imaginary Western (Lyrics) Jack Bruce Jack Bruce (3:30)
Tickets to Water Falls Jack Bruce Jack Bruce (3:00)
Wierd of Hermiston Jack Bruce Jack Bruce (2:24)
Rope Ladder to the Moon (Lyrics) Jack Bruce Jack Bruce (2:54)
The Ministry of Bag Jack Bruce Jack Bruce (2:49)
He the Richmond Jack Bruce Jack Bruce (3:36)
Boston Ball Game 1967 Jack Bruce Jack Bruce (1:45)
To Isengard Jack Bruce Jack Bruce (5:28)
The Clearout Jack Bruce Jack Bruce (2:35)

Credits

John Mumford (Horn), Jon Hiseman (Drums), Henry Lowther (Trumpet), Chris Spedding (Guitar), L'Angelo Misterioso (Guitar), Henry Lowther (Horn), Jack Bruce (Organ), Art Themen (Sax (Soprano)), John Marshall (Drums), Felix Pappalardi (Vocals), Jack Bruce (Guitar), Jack Bruce (Arranger), Art Themen (Saxophone), Harry Beckett (Horn), Dick Heckstall-Smith (Sax (Soprano)), Andy Johns (Engineer), John Tobler (Liner Notes), Art Themen (Sax (Tenor)), Jack Bruce (Vocals), Roger Phillip (Photography), Jack Bruce (Keyboards), Dick Heckstall-Smith (Saxophone), Felix Pappalardi (Producer), Jack Bruce (Cello), Dick Heckstall-Smith (Sax (Tenor)), George Harrison (Guitar), Jack Bruce (Piano), Jon Mumford (Drums), Jack Bruce (Bass), Harry Beckett (Trumpet), Felix Pappalardi (Percussion)
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Wikipedia: Songs for a Tailor
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Songs for a Tailor
Studio album by Jack Bruce
Released September 1969
Genre Pop music, rock music
Length 31:32 (initial release)
43:48 (2003 CD reissue)
Label Atco
(initial U.S. release, SD 33-306)
Polydor
Producer Felix Pappalardi
Professional reviews
Jack Bruce chronology
Songs for a Tailor
(1969)
Things We Like
(1970)

Songs for a Tailor is the 1969 solo studio album debut of musician, composer and singer Jack Bruce, who was already famous at the time of its release for his work with the supergroup Cream. Originally released on the Polydor label in Europe and on Atco Records in the U.S., Songs for a Tailor was the second solo album that Bruce recorded, though he did not release the first, Things We Like, for another year.

The album, which was titled in tribute to Cream's recently deceased clothing designer, displayed more of the musician's diverse influences than his compositions for Cream, though it did not chart as highly as his work with that band. Nevertheless, it was successful, reaching #6 on the UK Albums Chart and #55 on the Billboard "Pop Albums" chart.

While it has not been universally critically well-received, with a notable negative review by Rolling Stone on its first release, it is generally acclaimed and is considered among Bruce's best albums. The literary lyrics by poet and songwriter Pete Brown have been particularly divisive, with one notable critic singling them out for praise while others have been more generally critical. Notable songs on the album include "Never Tell Your Mother She's Out of Tune", with guitar by George Harrison, and "Theme for an Imaginary Western", which is featured in 2006's 1001 Songs: The Great Songs of All Time and the Artists, Stories and Secrets Behind Them.

Contents

Background

After performing with various blues bands in his youth, Bruce rose to prominence in the rock world as a member of influential rock band Cream.[1][2] After the group disbanded in 1969, Bruce began releasing solo material. Songs for a Tailor, released in September 1969, was Bruce's debut solo release, but chronologically his second solo album; Things We Like, his first solo recording, was released a year later.[3]

The album was titled in tribute to Jeannie Franklyn ("Genie the Tailor"), a clothing designer who designed wardrobes for Cream and was also the girlfriend of Fairport Convention guitarist Richard Thompson.[4] In 1969, Franklyn wrote Bruce a letter requesting that he "[s]ing some high notes for me," a letter that reached him on May 14, 1969, the day she was killed in a motor vehicle accident in Fairport Convention's touring van.[4] Franklyn died—and Bruce received the letter from her—on his 26th birthday.[5]

A blues and jazz musician by background who had studied Bach and Scottish folk music as a child, Bruce produced a debut effort that was musically diverse.[1][6][7] Songs for a Tailor was described in Music Week on its 2003 reissue as "an impressive effort defying musical categorisation".[8] Two of the songs—"Weird of Hermiston" and "The Clearout"—had originally been penned for possible inclusion on the 1967 Cream album Disraeli Gears.[9] However, the album was not simply a continuation of Bruce's material for Cream, but displayed more of the musician's diversity.[10]

Reception

The album was generally successful, reaching #6 on the UK Albums Chart and #55 on the Billboard "Pop Albums" chart.[11][12] It did not reach the sales levels of Bruce's work with Cream,[6] the later albums of which consistently broke the top 10 of the Billboard "Pop Albums" charts before their dissolution,[13] but, as of 2002, it was the most successful album of his solo career.[14] Largely acclaimed,[6] particularly in England,[15] the album proved influential, described in 2001 by BBC as a "seminal" work.[16] However, reviews were not universally positive, with critical opinion particularly divided on the album's lyrics, penned by long-term Bruce collaborator Pete Brown.

Ed Leimbacher, reviewing the album in 1969 for Rolling Stone, called Songs for a Tailor a "disappointment", panning it overall as "a patchwork affair lacking in any unifying thread, a baggy misfit made up of a shopworn miscellany of jazz riffs, rock underpinnings, chamber music strings, boringly baroque lyrics and a Bruce bass that [leaves]...everything distinctly bottom heavy."[17] However, later writings in the same magazine characterized it very differently. In 1971, Loyd Grossman termed it "[a] stunning recording with more than an ample amount of beautiful songs and excellent singing and playing".[3] In 1975, he opined that "Bruce's first album, Songs for a Tailor, was so outstanding that his other albums almost always suffer by comparison."[18] In 1989, Rolling Stone writer David Fricke, though noting that Bruce could "flirt with self-indulgence in the pursuit of the unconventional", described the artist's solo output as "highly underrated".[19] In its review, Allmusic summarizes the album as "picture perfect in construction, performance, and presentation."[10]

Lyrics

Brown's lyrics have been particularly divisive. Brown, a successful poet in the early 1960s,[20] had been collaborating with Bruce for some time, writing lyrics for such Cream hits as "White Room" and "Sunshine of Your Love". The lyrics he wrote for Songs for a Tailor are typically poetic and heavily inspired by literary themes, with the Shakespeareean "He the Richmond" and the horror-infused "Weird of Hermiston".[17]

The first Rolling Stone review judged the lyrics as unsuccessful, dismissing them as "silly" and primarily burdened by an overabundance of literary references.[17] 2006's 1001 Songs: The Great Songs of All Time and the Artists, Stories and Secrets Behind Them also disparaged the lyricist, stating that his "pretentious lyrics fail to connect", an inaccessibility that the book suggests combined with the lack of "instrumental fireworks" to prevent the album from reaching better commercial success.[4] "The musicianship," that work says, particularly referencing "Bruce's soulful vocals", "remains timeless."[4] But in later review of Bruce's work, Fricke regarded the songwriting more highly, questioning whether "anybody, beside Bruce and Brown, write songs like that anymore" and suggesting the cd version of the Bruce compilation Willpower specifically so that the lyrics could be read.[19]

Notable songs

"Theme for an Imaginary Western," which Allmusic describes as "Bruce's greatest hit that never charted,"[10] is perhaps the album's best-known song. According to Allmusic, "Theme" has a "fresh, rootsy sound" reminiscent of The Band's Music from Big Pink, derived from the combination of "Bruce's overdubbed piano and organ parts" and "the country-tinged lope of the rhythm section".[21]1001 Songs profiles the number, describing it as an "elegant, masterfully-constructed piece of jazz-rock", though it suggests that Brown's lyrics for the song are "opaque at best".[4] Leimbacher, though generally dismissive of the lyrics, found an exception for this song and "To Isengard",[17] while The Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music finds the song "evocative", indicating that the album contains "[s]ome of" Bruce's "finest lyrics".[22] The song was famously covered by Mountain, whose bassist-singer Felix Pappalardi had previously worked with Bruce as Cream's record producer, and also produced and appeared on Tailor. (One of Mountain's earliest performances of "Theme," at the August 1969 Woodstock Festival, predated the song's release on Songs for a Tailor by several weeks.) Colosseum (whose drummer Jon Hiseman played on Tailor's rendition of the song), and the Colosseum spin-off group Greenslade,[10] also recorded cover versions.

"Weird of Hermiston" and "The Clearout" were candidates for inclusion on Cream's 1967 landmark album Disraeli Gears, but deemed too uncommercial by Cream's then-U.S. label Atlantic/Atco Records for release on that record. Bruce's dissatisfaction at this is noted in the liner notes for Cream's box set Those Were the Days: "I played them for Ahmet (Atlantic executive Ahmet Ertegun), Tommy (producer/engineer Tom Dowd), and whoever else was around ... they thought it was rubbish, just psychedelic hogwash." Demo versions of the two songs, recorded by Cream in early 1967, are included on Those Were the Days.

"Never Tell Your Mother She's Out of Tune" featured the pseudonymous "L'Angelo Misterioso" (George Harrison's alternate name for his work with Cream) on guitar.[23] In 1989 Fricke described this song as a "wacky, brassy" "enigmatic Bruce-Brown [delight]".[19]

Bruce has continued to refine and re-record the tracks from Songs for a Tailor throughout his career, both in live and studio albums. Only "To Isengard" has not been revisited.

Track listing

All lyrics composed by Peter Brown, music by Jack Bruce[10].
Tracks 1-10 comprise the album's original 1969 release; tracks 11-14 were included in Polydor/Universal's 2003 CD reissue.

  1. "Never Tell Your Mother She's Out of Tune" – 3:41
  2. "Theme for an Imaginary Western" – 3:30
  3. "Tickets to Water Falls" – 3:00
  4. "Weird of Hermiston" – 2:24
  5. "Rope Ladder to the Moon" – 2:54
  6. "The Ministry of Bag" – 2:49
  7. "He the Richmond" – 3:36
  8. "Boston Ball Game 1967" – 1:45
  9. "To Isengard" – 5:28
  10. "The Clearout" – 2:35
  11. "The Ministry of Bag" (demo version) – 3:47
  12. "Weird of Hermiston" (alternate mix) – 2:33
  13. "The Clearout" (alternate mix) – 3:02
  14. "The Ministry of Bag" (alternate mix) – 2:54

Personnel

Performance

Production

References

  1. ^ a b Jack Bruce at Allmusic
  2. ^ Songs for a Tailor at Allmusic
  3. ^ a b Grosman, Loyd (1971-09-16). "Harmony Row, Jack Bruce". Rolling Stone (91): 42. 
  4. ^ a b c d e Creswell, Toby (2006). 1001 Songs: The Great Songs of All Time and the Artists, Stories and Secrets Behind Them. Thunder's Mouth Press. p. 332. ISBN 1560259159. http://books.google.com/books?id=A_xtSKdVGpQC&pg=PA332&dq=%22Songs+for+a+Tailor%22&client=firefox-a#PPA332,M1. 
  5. ^ Cossar, Neil; Pete Hawkins (2005). This Day in Music: An Everyday Record of 10,000 Musical Facts. Sterling Publishing Company, Inc.. ISBN 184340298X. http://books.google.com/books?id=7OTk-SooXWcC&pg=PT144&dq=%22Jeannie+Franklyn%22+Bruce#PPT144,M1. 
  6. ^ a b c Cairns, Dan (2008-06-06). "Radical ways of the ace of bass". The Australian. http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,23817224-16947,00.html. Retrieved 2008-11-07. 
  7. ^ Fricke, David (2005-05-17). "Pete Brown feels Cream". Rolling Stone. http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/7315180/pete_brown_feels_cream. Retrieved 2008-11-07. 
  8. ^ "New releases: for week starting 28 April 2003". Music Week. 2003-04-26. http://www.accessmylibrary.com/coms2/summary_0286-23331735_ITM. Retrieved 2008-11-07. 
  9. ^ Welch, Chris (2000). Cream: The Legendary Sixties Supergroup : Ginger Baker, Jack Bruce, Eric Clapton. Backbeat Books. ISBN 0879306246. http://books.google.com/books?id=8KWD2dGYPhYC&pg=PT111&dq=%22Songs+for+a+Tailor%22&lr=&client=firefox-a#PPT111,M1. 
  10. ^ a b c d e Songs for a Tailor at Allmusic
  11. ^ Warwick, Neil; Jon Kutner, Tony Brown (2004). The Complete Book of the British Charts: Singles and Albums. Omnibus Press. p. 188. ISBN 1844490580. 
  12. ^ Songs for a Tailor Billboard Album at Allmusic
  13. ^ Cream Billboard Albums at Allmusic
  14. ^ Leng, Simon (2002). The Music of George Harrison: While My Guitar Gently Weeps. SAF Publishing Ltd. p. 37. ISBN 0946719500. http://books.google.com/books?id=ZjY3kg2umEQC&pg=PA37&dq=%22Songs+for+a+Tailor%22&client=firefox-a. 
  15. ^ Helander, Brock (1982). The Rock Who's who: A Biographical Dictionary and Critical Discography Including Rhythm-and-blues, Soul, Rockabilly, Folk, Country, Easy Listening, Punk, and New Wave. Schirmer Books. p. 109. ISBN 0028712501. "Despite receiving much praise, particularly in England, Songs for a Tailor and Harmony Row were largely overlooked." 
  16. ^ "Bruce goes back to basics". BBC News. 2001-10-02. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/1574779.stm. Retrieved 2008-11-07. 
  17. ^ a b c d Leimbacher, Ed (1969-11-15). "Songs for a Tailor, Jack Bruce". Rolling Stone (46): 37. 
  18. ^ Grosman, Loyd (1975-02-27). "Out of the Storm, Jack Bruce". Rolling Stone (181): 53. 
  19. ^ a b c Fricke, David (1989-04-20). "Willpower, Jack Bruce". Rolling Stone (550): 98–99. 
  20. ^ Paytress, Mark (2002). Bolan: The Rise and Fall of a 20th Century Superstar. Omnibus Press. p. 123. ISBN 0711992932. http://books.google.com/books?id=63lchQOhltIC&pg=PA123&dq=%22Pete+Brown%22+%22poet%22. 
  21. ^ Theme for an Imaginary Western at Allmusic
  22. ^ Larkin, Colin (1992). The Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music. Guinness. p. 346. ISBN 0851129390. "Some of his finest lyrics are to be found on Jack Bruce's solo debut Songs For A Tailor and How's Tricks, the former included the evocative 'Theme For An Imaginary Western'(sic)" 
  23. ^ Miles, Barry; Chris Charlesworth (1998). The Beatles: A Diary. Omnibus Press. p. 302. ISBN 0711963150. http://books.google.com/books?id=pEHNfqJZYTYC&pg=PA302&dq=%22Songs+for+a+Tailor%22&client=firefox-a. 

External links

  • Lyrics, at Jack Bruce's official site

 
 
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