Rock/Pop
CDアルバム

Stephen Stills

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1,090
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フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 1995年12月25日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルAtlantic
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 82809
SKU 075678280924

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:38:59
Personnel includes: Stephen Stills (vocals, guitar, organ, keyboards, bass, steel drums, percussion); Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton (guitar); Sydney George (flute, alto flute, winds); Booker T. Jones (organ, keyboards, background vocals); Fuzzy Samuels (bass, background vocals); Dallas Taylor, John Barbata (drums); David Crosby, Graham Nash, Cass Elliott, Rita Coolidge, Priscilla Coolidge, Claudia Lennear, John Sebastian (background vocals). Personnel: Stephen Stills (vocals, guitar, organ, keyboards, steel drum, percussion); Booker T. Jones (vocals, organ, keyboards); Sherlie Matthews, David Crosby, Claudia Lanier, Fuzzy Samuels, Priscilla Jones, Graham Nash, Judith Powell, John Sebastian , Larry Steele, Liza Strike, Priscilla Coolidge, Rita Coolidge, Tony Wilson , Claudia Lennear, Cass Elliot (vocals); Eric Clapton, Jimi Hendrix (guitar); Sidney George (flute, alto flute); Dallas Taylor , Conrad Isadore, John Barbata, Richie Hayward (drums); Jeff Whittaker (congas); Sydney George (wind). Recording information: London, England. This outstanding solo debut came at a particularly successful and creative time for Stephen Stills. In the first few years of the 1970s, he recorded two solo albums, released the superb Manassas double-album, and performed as part of Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young. No one would expect a musician spreading himself so thin to be able to make a record as focused, nuanced, and bursting with ideas as STEPHEN STILLS-- yet that is exactly what Stills did. On this varied set Stills's prodigious talent is laid bare, encompassing Memphis soul, folk, blues, gospel, rock, and good-time pop with a grace that equals anything in his discography. The best-known cut here is the '70s radio staple "Love the One You're With," with its percolating percussion and free-love ethos. Equally arresting is "Black Queen," an acoustic guitar showcase allegedly recorded after Stills had downed a bottle of tequila. The gorgeous, stirring "Do for the Others" is another highlight. Stills plays many of the instruments himself, but a star-studded guest list, including Ringo Starr, Eric Clapton (who plays lead on the bluesy "Go Back Home"), and Jimi Hendrix (who solos on the rocker "Old Times Good Times"). Yet this is Stills's show all the way, showcasing his songwriting, singing, and musicianship to superb effect.
録音 : ステレオ (Studio)

  1. 1.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      Love the One You're With

      アーティスト: Stephen Stills

    2. 2.
      Do for the Others

      アーティスト: Stephen Stills

    3. 3.
      Church (Part of Someone)

      アーティスト: Stephen Stills

    4. 4.
      Old Times Good Times

      アーティスト: Stephen Stills

    5. 5.
      Go Back Home

      アーティスト: Stephen Stills

    6. 6.
      Sit Yourself Down

      アーティスト: Stephen Stills

    7. 7.
      To a Flame

      アーティスト: Stephen Stills

    8. 8.
      Black Queen

      アーティスト: Stephen Stills

    9. 9.
      Cherokee

      アーティスト: Stephen Stills

    10. 10.
      We Are Not Helpless

      アーティスト: Stephen Stills

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Stephen Stills

ゲスト

その他
プロデューサー: Stephen StillsBill Halverson
エンジニア: Andy Johns

オリジナル発売日:1970年

商品の紹介

クロスビー・スティルス・ナッシュ&ヤングでの活動中に発表されたソロ・デビュー作。ゲストで参加したジミヘンにワイルドなオルガンで渡り合う“OLD TIMES GOOD TIMES”のド迫力グルーヴも熱いが、いまではフリー・ソウル世代の讃歌として信仰の厚い“LOVE THE ONE YOU'RE WITH”こそ、やはり本作の白眉。ゴスペル風ながら軽快に弾むアコースティックなグルーヴ感が胸躍らせる名曲。
タワーレコード(2009/04/08)

Mojo (Publisher) - "Churchy organ and piano abound here....[P]orchfront solo blues Black Queen establishes Stills as no mean picker himself..."
Rovi

Talk about understatement -- there's Stephen Stills on the cover, acoustic guitar in hand, promising a personal singer/songwriter-type statement. And there is some of that -- even a lot of that personal music-making -- on Stephen Stills, but it's all couched in astonishingly bold musical terms. Stephen Stills is top-heavy with 1970 sensibilities, to be sure, from the dedication to the memory of Jimi Hendrix to the now piggish-seeming message of "Love the One You're With." Yet, listening to this album three decades on, it's still a jaw-dropping experience, the musical equal to Crosby, Stills & Nash or Deja Vu, and only a shade less important than either of them. The mix of folk, blues (acoustic and electric), hard rock, and gospel is seamless, and the musicianship and the singing are all so there, in your face, that it just burns your brain (in the nicest, most benevolent possible way) even decades later. Recorded amid the breakup of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, Stills' first solo album was his effort to put together his own sound and, not surprisingly, it's similar to a lot of stuff on the group's two albums. But it's also infinitely more personal, as well as harder and bluesier in many key spots; yet, it's every bit as soft and as lyrical as the group in other spots, and all laced with a degree of yearning and urgency that far outstrips virtually anything he did with the group. "Love the One You're With," which started life as a phrase that Stills borrowed from Billy Preston at a party, is the song from this album that everybody knows, but it's actually one of the lesser cuts here -- not much more than a riff and an upbeat lyric and mood, albeit all of it infectious. "Do for the Others," by contrast, is one of the prettiest and most moving pieces of music that Stills has ever been associated with, and "Church (Part of Someone)" showed him moving toward gospel and R&B (and good at it, too); and then there's "Old Times Good Times," musically as good a rock song as Stills has ever recorded (even if it borrows a bit from "Pre-Road Downs"), and featuring Jimi Hendrix on lead guitar. "Go Back Home" (which has Eric Clapton on guitar) is fine a piece of bluesy hard rock, while "Sit Yourself Down" features superb singing by Stills and a six-person backing chorus (that includes Cass Elliot, Graham Nash, and David Crosby) around a great tune. "To a Flame" is downright ethereal, while the live "Black Queen" is a superb piece of acoustic blues. All of this is presented by Stills in the best singing voice of his career up to that point, bolder, more outgoing, and more powerful (a result of his contact with Doris Troy) than anything in his previous output. He also plays lots of instruments (a la Crosby, Stills & Nash, which is another reason it sounds so similar to the group in certain ways), though a bit more organ than guitar, thanks to the presence of Hendrix and Clapton on two cuts. If the album has a flaw, it's the finale, "We Are Not Helpless," which slightly overstays its welcome. But hey, this was still the late '60s, and excess was the rule, not the exception, and it's such modest excess. ~ Bruce Eder
Rovi

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