ALAN PRICE: LIBERTY (1989)
1) Fool's In Love; 2)
Everything But Love; 3) Days Like These; 4) Bad Dream; 5) Double Love; 6)
Changes; 7) Mania Ureania; 8) Liberty; 9) Say It Isn't True; 10) Free With Me;
11) Man Overboard.
In the 1980s, Alan's musical activity abruptly
decreased, which now seems kind of a good thing, given the general
inauspiciousness of that decade for veteran rockers. Discographies of that period
are vague and contradictory, which probably has to do with the fact that, once
his contract with Jet Records had expired, he found himself without a permanent
record label, and whenever he did choose to record something, it could only be
picked up by some minor team for a very limited release. As far as I can tell,
he did manage to put out an album of old folk cover tunes (but also including
Dylan's ʽGirl Of (sic!) The North
Countryʼ), called Geordie Roots And
Branches, in 1982 on a local Newcastle label; and then there's Travellin' Man from 1986, for some
reason released on the Jamaica-based Trojan Records and largely consisting of
covers of New Orleanian music from Snooks Eaglin to Fats Domino. Good luck
finding these in any form — nobody ever thought of properly digitalizing either
— but something tells me that you won't miss too much if you never hear Mr.
Price digging all the way down to his Geordie roots or confessing his burning
love for Louisiana bayous.
The first and only Eighties' album that is available on CD (because that was the
way it was originally released) is Liberty.
It consists largely of original material (although a re-recording of ʽChangesʼ
was still thrown in, probably in the same vain hope of boosting sales a little
bit that had already made Alan cheapen his act with the new-and-not-improved
ʽHouse Of The Rising Sunʼ at the beginning of the decade), but most of the
songs were co-written by Price with guitar player Steve Grant, formerly of the
band Top Secret that was managed by Chas Chandler. The band itself only had one
LP out in 1981, but apparently, Steve and his brother Pete Grant (on bass) got acquainted
with Alan through Chas, and eventually got together as almost equal partners to
try and help Alan get back in show business.
The result is pretty much what you'd expect
from Price at this point. There seems to be no force in the world that would tear
him from his beloved vaudeville and Randy Newmanisms, but just as he was always
okay about combining them with contemporary trends in the Seventies (disco
etc.), so is he willing to try out some Eighties' clichés here. So get ready
for some really plastic and corny electronic keyboards, even cornier electronic
echo on the drums, and at least one or two very, very bad songs on the fringe
of arena-rock, synth-pop, and hair metal (ʽFree With Meʼ, where Mr. Price
confesses that "I really want a woman with me tonight" as if he were
Bryan Adams to really awful synths and testosteronic guitar solos).
On the other hand, ten years of relative
inactivity have not completely extinguished his songwriting talents, and
there's still a nice stack of good taste that cannot be totally hidden from
view by corny arrangements. The record is bookmarked by two catchy, fun pop
rockers — ʽFool's In Loveʼ is harmless danceable vaudeville, and ʽMan
Overboardʼ, despite the grim title, is an upbeat, ʽDon't Stopʼ-like power pop number
whose charm largely consists of making you sing "throw me down another
line, this man's overboard" as if you were celebrating rather than
panicking. In between, there's decent New Orleanian R&B (ʽEverything But
Loveʼ), a surprisingly gripping funk rocker with a "girl we gotta get out
of this place" message (ʽBad Dreamʼ), and a completely unexpected
baroque-pop number about the illusion of liberty (title track) with
orchestration straight out of 1967 — probably the only song here that would
feel well at home on any of the records from his classic period.
That does not mean that the record should have
included boring adult contemporary balladry like ʽDouble Loveʼ, or a completely
unnecessary eight-minute long Epic Cover of Jackson Browne's ʽSay It Isn't
Trueʼ, or the energy-wasting New Wave rocker ʽMania Ureaniaʼ; nor does it mean
that it is, in any way, an improvement over his middle-of-the-road albums from
1976 to 1980, although it does seem to have a higher percentage of «socially
conscious» tunes than any of those. But this is by-the-book social
consciousness, not really supported by equal feeling within the music, and, as
I said, only the title track truly gives away the same sensitive, emotional
Alan Price who used to be such an enchanting spokesman for the North. Overall,
quite listenable and suffering much less from Eighties' overproduction than it
could, and Steve Grant makes a decent songwriting (if not necessarily
guitar-playing) partner for the man, but certainly not the kind of «big
comeback» that could be hoped for after ten years of near-silence.
"Good luck finding these in any form."
ReplyDeleteIt took me two seconds searching on YouTube to find several songs of Geordie Roots and Travellin' Man.
Steve Grant is also the guy responsible for your two favourite songs (and mine as well) off the Animals' 1983 reunion album Ark, if I recall correctly.
ReplyDelete