![]() Ronstadt’s version of the Buddy Holly hit was the album’s first single, and rose to #11 on the Billboard chart. The rowdy “That’ll Be The Day” breaks the mood. Bonoff herself and singer-songwriter Wendy Waldman are the supporting multi-tracked chorus. He’s also playing an ARP synthesizer to mimic a string section on the track. Bonoff’s “If He’s Ever Near” follows, with an effectively low-key opening as Ronstadt whisper-sings the lyrics over Andrew Gold’s sustained organ note. Ronstadt pretty much follows Cooder’s arrangement, and doesn’t so much improve on his version as realign it for her less spiky personality. “The Tattler” is a Washington Phillips blues-gospel song from 1929 that was rediscovered and reworked by Ry Cooder on his 1974 Paradise and Lunch album. A promotional film for the song made at the time shows the perfect balance between the collaborators, and the sharp focus they maintained. Ronstadt’s voice is situated perfectly in the mix. It’s riveting from the opening lines: “Save me/Free me/From my heart this time.” The arrangement is detailed, with subtle dynamic changes, and recording engineer Val Garay captures a remarkable separation of instruments that’s also warm and inviting. “Lose Again” begins the LP with an immediate emotional peak. For the sessions that became Hasten Down the Wind she turned to Warren Zevon, Tracy Nelson, John and Johanna Hall, and especially Karla Bonoff, recording three of her tunes, including the opener “Lose Again” and closer “Someone to Lay Down Beside Me.” Like Joan Baez and Judy Collins before her, Ronstadt didn’t focus on writing songs herself, instead developing a remarkable radar for often obscure material by little-known or underappreciated composers that suited her. Occasionally she’ll adopt a mannerism of being scatterbrained that can create the impression that she’s vaguely dim, which is so far from the truth, because she’s brilliant.” “That’s one of the things that drew me to Southern California as a central sphere, a synthesis of everything.”Īsher has suggested she had to become a chameleon to survive the inherent sexism of the music business, telling Charone, “She’s more perceptive and rational than people give her credit for. “My musical background has always been completely random,” she told Sounds’ Barbara Charone in 1976. Those hours spent listening to her father’s collection of Ella Fitzgerald and Frank Sinatra LPs paid off no matter what musical genre she was performing in. She was portrayed as the quintessential “emotional female,” swept away while she sang yearning love songs like “Love Has No Pride,” “When Will I Be Loved,” “Long Long Time” and “You’re No Good.” Too little attention was paid to her technical abilities and craft: her breath control made those swoops up and down the octaves possible, and her diction and pitch were perfect. Related: Our Album Rewind review of Trio, featuring Ronstadt, Dolly Parton & Emmylou Harris Pressured by her original label Capitol to play up her earthy sexiness, she appeared barefoot in skimpy clothes on the cover of her Silk Purse album, and the art direction of her next three albums all pursued an identical template-show this woman’s beautiful face as large as possible on the front cover. For years, it seemed that every article written about her had to mention she liked to go braless, and speculate about whatever celebrity she was currently rumored to be dating. For her entire singing career, she’d struggled to keep the focus on her voice and interpretive talent rather than her good looks and sex appeal. You’d think Ronstadt had nothing left to prove, but she did. Jann Wenner Memoir, ‘Like a Rolling Stone,’ Coming.Bob Dylan’s ‘Blonde on Blonde’: Twice As Good.Mike + The Mechanics Announce 2023 Tour.Beatles Online Workshop Coming This Summer.Jethro Tull Sets ‘Thick As a Brick’ Reissues For 50th Anniversary. ![]() The Rascals’ ‘Time Peace’: A Greatest Hits LP That Foretold the Future.The Zombies’ Colin Blunstone Interview: It’s Time.Eric Clapton Issues ‘Nothing But the Blues’ Soundtrack, Film.Paul McCartney Plays Club Gig Prior to Glastonbury.Christine McVie Releases Solo Collection, ‘Songbird’.Janis Joplin & Jorma Kaukonen’s Tale of the Typewriter Tape.Little Feat’s Live ‘Waiting For Columbus’ Gets Super Deluxe Edition.Prince’s ‘Purple Rain’ Album: Crazy Man, Crazy.The Rolling Stones’ ‘Licked Live in NYC’: Review.The Rolling Stones Triumph at Hyde Park.Free’s ‘Fire and Water’: More Than Just All Right.Stephen Stills Performs With Tom Petty’s Mudcrutch: 2016.Bad Company’s 1974 Debut: When Rock Fans Couldn’t Get Enough.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |