Track Listings
| 1. Changing Times |
| 2. Easy Rider |
| 3. Stony Road |
| 4. Dancing The Blues Away |
| 5. Burning Feet |
| 6. Mississippi 2 |
| 7. Slow Dance |
| 8. When The Good Lord Talked To Jesus |
| 9. Heading For The City |
| 10. So Lonely |
| 11. Someday My Peace Will Come |
| 12. The Hustler |
| 13. Give That Girl A Diamond |
Editorial Reviews
Product Description
The Beloved Singer/Songwriter Has Miraculously Recovered from a Dibilitating Illness and this Album is the First Fruit of his Regenerated Vigor. Based in the Blues, it is the Style of Music He Originally Meant to Record Through his Career Until Pop Producers Took Him in an Opposite Direction. The Tracks Clearly Show He was Meant to Sing the Blues and Age and Experience Has Only Enhanced Singing Voice. The Lyrical Content is his Most Honest, Poetic and Affecting. Critics have Justly Hailed this Album as the Best of his Career. A Bonus for Fans is a Documentary of the Recording of this Album that was Lensed by Director Rob Payton.
Stony Road,Chris Rea,Wea International,Pop,Rock
Average customer rating:
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Dancing Down the Stony Road
Chris Rea Manufacturer: Import [Generic] ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00006IQI2 Release Date: 2002-11-12 |
Tracks:
Album Description
Standard edition of 2002 album combines tracks from both discs of the limited edition set. First album from Rea since 2000 following serious illness. Dancing Down The Stony Road is a blues album released on his own Jazzy Blue label. Includes colorful booklet with paintings, photographs and lyrics. 20 tracks.Album Details
The Beloved Singer/Songwriter Has Miraculously Recovered from a Dibilitating Illness and this Album is the First Fruit of his Regenerated Vigor. Based in the Blues, it is the Style of Music He Originally Meant to Record Through his Career Until Pop Producers Took Him in an Opposite Direction. The Tracks Clearly Show He was Meant to Sing the Blues and Age and Experience Has Only Enhanced Singing Voice. Critics have Hailed this Album as the Best of his Career. A Documentary of the Recording of this Album was by Director Rob Payton. This Edition Includes a Limited Bonus Disc and Includes Seven Tracks Not on the Standard Edition and in a Different Running Order.Customer Reviews:
There's A Big Difference Between Good And Great.......2004-07-08
Great Release.......2003-09-06
He only gets better as he gets older! Highly Recommended.......2003-05-04
Brilliant album by CR!!!.......2003-03-20
File Under Blues.......2002-11-16
"Dancing Down the Stony Road" is a remarkable record by most standards, perhaps even those of classic blues. These are songs of pain, performed with a great deal of expression -- true blue blues. He voices the agony and the love of life and music he experienced while recovering from a potentially terminal illness. It's his first blues album (and deserves W.C. Handy Awards for every "crossover" category), but it sounds like he's been playing blues all his life.
Rea dedicates this album to Charley Patton, Blind Willie Johnson, and Sister Rosetta Tharpe. Rea's always had a knack for interesting, strong rhythms, so Patton might not come as a surprise, and his slide playing has obvious ties to Johnson's death meditations, but it's great to hear the songs influenced by Tharpe's fierce gospel drive. I'd like to think these artists would be proud to see their names associated with this album.
Rea has written songs suggesting bewilderment and sorrow before (cf. 'Nothing to Fear' or 'Gone Fishing'), but nothing so direct as these songs, in my opinion. I cried when I first heard 'Easy Rider'--the pain in the lyrics, the voice, and especially the slide guitar solo. I wasn't prepared for it, and I'm still startled by every song on the album. Perhaps the lyrics sometimes try a little too hard, making leaps I can't quite follow (i.e., looking for sugar to take away the gray). But they do convey an intensely personal experience, much like Van Morrison's lyrics do.
It's also a great album with which to consider his other albums, just like "Astral Weeks" and "Moondance" for Van's recordings. If all Rea's roads lead to "Dancing," they're not one-way streets, and I can go back and check them out. I realize that I love "King of the Beach" (one of the great summer albums of all time) and "God's Great Banana Skin" because their hearts beat to the blues you hear in "Dancing Down the Stony Road." Other albums don't, however, like "The Road to Hell, Part 2," which seems like a cynical statement about techno-rock.
Probably the most comparable recent album is Dylan's "Time Out Of Mind." Both owe their life to near-death experiences and the blues. I like these albums about the same. I wish Rea the same success . . .
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