Jackson Browne Hear Come Those Tears Again

1974 studio album by Jackson Browne

Late for the Sky
JacksonBrowneLatefortheSky.jpg
Studio anthology past

Jackson Browne

Released September 13, 1974
Recorded 1974
Studio
  • Elektra Sound Recorders (Los Angeles)
  • Hollywood Audio (Hollywood)
  • Sunset Sound (Hollywood)
Genre Stone
Length forty:38
Label Asylum
Producer Jackson Browne, Al Schmitt
Jackson Browne chronology
For Everyman
(1973)
Belatedly for the Heaven
(1974)
The Pretender
(1976)
Singles from Late for the Sky
  1. "Walking Slow"
    Released: January 1975
  2. "Fountain of Sorrow"
    Released: 1975

Tardily for the Sky is the third studio album past American vocalist–songwriter Jackson Browne, released by Asylum Records on September 13, 1974. It peaked at number 14 on Billboard's Pop Albums chart.

In 2020, the album was deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" by the Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Recording Registry.[1]

Groundwork [edit]

Browne was still living in his childhood abode, The Abbey San Encino, where he began writing the songs for his third anthology. Because of the high costs of recording his previous anthology, Aviary Records founder David Geffen required him to complete this next anthology quicker and at less cost. Browne decided to use his touring band of David Lindley, Doug Haywood, Jai Winding, and Larry Zack. It was likewise decided that Al Schmitt, an engineer on For Everyman, would co-produce to aid in the album beingness completed on time. The album was completed in six weeks and at one-half the cost ($50,000) of For Everyman. Numerous friends of Browne's, including Dan Fogelberg, Don Henley, and J. D. Souther contributed harmony vocals. There were only eight songs on the album, five of them longer than five minutes.[2]

The championship track was used in the 1976 Martin Scorsese film Taxi Commuter.[three] "Before the Deluge" was later covered past Joan Baez on her 1979 album Honest Lullaby; Baez and Browne performed the song together on her 1989 PBS concert special. "Walking Irksome" and "Fountain of Sorrow" were released as singles but both failed to chart.[ii]

In his spoken communication inducting Browne into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Bruce Springsteen called Belatedly for the Sky Browne's "masterpiece" and referred to the car doors slamming at the end of "The Late Evidence".[4]

In 2000 information technology was voted number 594 in Colin Larkin's All Time Top grand Albums.[5]

In 2003, the album was ranked number 372 on Rolling Stone mag'due south list of the 500 greatest albums of all time, Browne's highest ranking. In a 2012 update it ranked at 377.[6]

The album was certified as a Gold record in 1974 and Platinum in 1989 by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA).[vii]

Embrace [edit]

Browne has publicly acknowledged that the cover art for Tardily for the Heaven was inspired by the 1954 painting 50'Empire des Lumieres ("Empire of Light"), by Belgian surrealist René Magritte. The album itself contains the credit, "cover concept Jackson Browne if it's all reet with Magritte". The original photograph was shot on South Lucerne Artery but south of Due west 2nd Street in Windsor Square,[8] about 10 miles southwest of Browne'southward childhood home, the Abbey San Encino, in Highland Park, California. Designer and front cover photographer Bob Seidemann said, "I spoke to Jackson in 1980 and he told me he idea it was his favorite cover. Lest the jacket announced too funereal, a mood-defusing photo of a relaxed Jackson, almost smiling and looking as though he has a surprise to share, occupies a small square of the dorsum cover."[ix]

Reception [edit]

Retrospective professional reviews
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic [10]
Christgau's Tape Guide B–[11]
The Encyclopedia of Pop Music [14]
Tom Hull B[15]
MusicHound Stone: The Essential Anthology Guide iv/5[12]
The Rolling Rock Album Guide [xiii]

Reviewing for Rolling Stone in 1974, Stephen Holden highly praised the album, calling it Browne'south "most mature, conceptually unified piece of work to date" and saying that the "...open-concluded poetry achieves power from the nearly religious intensity that accumulates around the central motifs; its fervor is underscored by the sparest and hardest product to be constitute on any Browne album yet... as well as by his impassioned, oracular singing way."[16]

In a retrospective review for AllMusic, William Ruhlmann describes the themes of the album as "love, loss, identity, apocalypse", similar to Browne'southward debut album, feeling that Browne "delved fifty-fifty deeper into them...However his seeming uncertainty and self-doubt reflected the size and complexity of the problems he was addressing in these songs, and few had ever explored such territory, much less mapped it so well."[10]

According to The Rolling Stone Album Guide, Late for the Sky "strengthens and solidifies Browne's approach; it'southward the quintessential Browne album. The metaphorical complication of 'Fountain of Sorrow' and the clear-eyed poignancy of 'For a Dancer' would be a tough act to follow...when his songwriting is abrupt, the mellowing trend in his music dulls the affect."[thirteen] A 1999 Rolling Rock review of For Everyman called Tardily for the Sky Browne's "masterpiece".[17]

Musichound Stone: The Essential Album Guide call it "a bit mopey, simply it hangs together as Jackson Browne's strongest and most melodious album, with a couple of rockers thrown in to perk up the listeners."[12] Robert Christgau was more disquisitional in Christgau'southward Record Guide: Stone Albums of the Seventies (1981), saying that Browne'south "linguistic gentility is inappropriate, his millenarianism is self-indulgent...This, of class, rather conveniently forgetting that artistic criticism is also highly self-indulgent, every bit is art."[xi]

In pop culture [edit]

"For a Dancer" has a unique connexion to Saturday Night Live. The vocal was played at memorial services for both John Belushi[xviii] and Phil Hartman (by Browne at the Hartman service).[19]

The title track appears in a scene in the motion-picture show Taxi Driver.[20]

The title track is included as essay twenty in Songbook (published in the Britain every bit 31 Songs) by Nick Hornby.

Rails listing [edit]

All tracks are written by Jackson Browne.

Side one
  1. "Tardily for the Heaven" – 5:36
  2. "Fountain of Sorrow" – vi:42
  3. "Farther On" – v:17
  4. "The Belatedly Evidence" – 5:09
Side two
  1. "The Road and the Heaven" – 3:04
  2. "For a Dancer" – four:42
  3. "Walking Irksome" – iii:50
  4. "Before the Deluge" – six:eighteen

Personnel [edit]

  • Jackson Browne – vocals, acoustic guitar, piano, slide guitar (on "The Road and The Sky")
  • David Campbell – string organisation on "The Late Evidence"
  • Joyce Everson – harmony vocals
  • Beth Fitchet – harmony vocals
  • Dan Fogelberg – harmony vocals
  • Doug Haywood – bass guitar, harmony vocals
  • Don Henley – harmony vocals
  • David Lindley – electric guitar, lap steel guitar, fiddle; harmony vocals (as Perry Lindley)
  • Terry Reid – harmony vocals
  • Fritz Richmond – jug on "Walking Wearisome"
  • J. D. Souther – harmony vocals
  • Jai Winding – pianoforte, Hammond organ
  • Larry Zack – drums, percussion
  • H. Driver, Henry Thome, Michael Condello – handclaps

Production notes:

  • Jackson Browne – producer, cover concept
  • Al Schmitt – producer
  • Kent Nebergall – engineer
  • Tom Perry – engineer
  • Fritz Richmond – engineer
  • Greg Ladanyi – mastering
  • Bob Seidemann – front cover, pattern
  • Rick Griffin – front comprehend lettering
  • Henry Diltz – back cover photography

Charts [edit]

References [edit]

  1. ^ Schuessler, Jennifer (March 24, 2021). "Janet Jackson and Kermit the Frog Added to National Recording Registry". The New York Times . Retrieved March 24, 2021.
  2. ^ a b Bego, Mark (2005). Jackson Browne: His Life and His Music. Citadel Press. ISBN9780806526423.
  3. ^ "The A.V. Club: Song And Vision No. 1". Retrieved June 4, 2010.
  4. ^ "Springsteen'southward induction spoken communication of Jackson Browne". Archived from the original on September fourteen, 2010. Retrieved June 4, 2010.
  5. ^ Colin Larkin (2000). All Time Peak thousand Albums (3rd ed.). Virgin Books. p. 199. ISBN0-7535-0493-6.
  6. ^ "500 Greatest Albums of All Time Rolling Stone's definitive list of the 500 greatest albums of all fourth dimension". Rolling Rock. 2012. Retrieved September 5, 2019.
  7. ^ RIAA Gold and Platinum accolade. Archived 2015-09-24 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved July twenty, 2010
  8. ^ Mary (2014-04-10). "Vintage Photo Shoot: Windsor Square Dwelling in Classic Jackson Browne Album Cover". Larchmont Buzz - Hancock Park News . Retrieved 2021-07-27 .
  9. ^ "The Design of a Classic Anthology Cover". Archived from the original on October 10, 2012. Retrieved June 4, 2010.
  10. ^ a b Ruhlmann, William. "Late for the Sky > Review". AllMusic. Retrieved June 4, 2010. [ dead link ]
  11. ^ a b Christgau, Robert (1981). "Consumer Guide '70s: B". Christgau's Tape Guide: Stone Albums of the Seventies. Ticknor & Fields. ISBN089919026X . Retrieved Feb 22, 2019 – via robertchristgau.com.
  12. ^ a b Asakawa, Gil (1996). "Late for the Sky > Review". Musichound Rock: The Essential Album Guide.
  13. ^ a b Brackett, Nathan; Hoard, Christian, eds. (2004). The New Rolling Stone Anthology Guide: Completely Revised and Updated fourth Edition . New York, New York: Fireside. pp. 112–113. ISBN978-0-7432-0169-eight.
  14. ^ Larkin, Colin (2007). The Encyclopedia of Popular Music (4th ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN978-0195313734.
  15. ^ Hull, Tom (April 1975). "The Rekord Report: Tertiary Card". Overdose . Retrieved June 26, 2020 – via tomhull.com.
  16. ^ Holden, Stephen (November 1974). "Tardily for the Sky > Review". Rolling Stone.
  17. ^ Anthony DeCurtis (1999). "For Lowest > Review". Rolling Rock.
  18. ^ ""I can see him at present rolling down the aisle"". UPI.
  19. ^ Thomas, Mike (2014). You Might Remember Me: The Life and Times of Phil Hartman. St. Martin'southward Printing. p. 286. ISBN9781250027962.
  20. ^ "Song And Vision No. 1: "Late For The Sky" and Taxi Driver". The A.V. Club.
  21. ^ "Jackson Browne Chart History (Billboard 200)". Billboard. Retrieved December 13, 2021.
  22. ^ "Acme Billboard 200 Albums – Year-End 1975". Billboard. Archived from the original on November viii, 2021. Retrieved December 13, 2021.

cendejaswhitted78.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Late_for_the_Sky

0 Response to "Jackson Browne Hear Come Those Tears Again"

Post a Comment

Iklan Atas Artikel

Iklan Tengah Artikel 1

Iklan Tengah Artikel 2

Iklan Bawah Artikel