Rock/Pop
CDアルバム

Jack Of Diamonds [Digipak]

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2,079
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フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 2007年09月24日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルSPV GmbH
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 デジパック
規格品番 SPV50772CD
SKU 693723507729

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:00:00
Although John Phillips record releases virtually ground to a halt after his 1970 solo debut album, he did continue recording intermittently in the '70s. The 13 tracks forming the core of Jack of Diamonds are an approximation of how a second Phillips solo LP might have sounded, pieced together from various sessions in 1972 and 1973. Phillips made a great contribution to mid-'60s pop/rock as chief songwriter for the Mamas & the Papas, and to be harsh, this batch of tunes is not only weak in comparison, but also finds him losing his central threads of stylistic identity. Maybe it has something to do with the confusion of finding his music increasingly out of step with the times, but much of this is pretty lethargic, nearly faceless, early-'70s singer/songwriter fodder. Sometimes inspired by the time he was spending in New York, the songs reflect a vague sense of dislocation, discontent, and sketches of slightly odd characters and milieus without connecting deeply. As a solo singer, he seems inadequate to the task of fully expressing the complexities he apparently wants to probe. The instrumentation is a too-tame form of laid-back jazzy early-'70s rock, despite (or because) of the presence of pros like Jim W. Gordon, Van Dyke Parks, and some of the Crusaders. "Jack of Diamonds," aka "Me and My Uncle," is a real good song, but you won't know it from the lounge-ish reading he gives it here, and it's terribly inferior to the versions cut by Dino Valenti, Judy Collins, and Mike Wilhelm. The five cuts designated as bonus tracks -- not intended for a second Phillips album, but recorded between 1970 and 1973 -- are both different in mood and a little more satisfying, including the two songs he contributed to Robert Altman's eccentric movie Brewster McCloud; a couple Mamas & the Papas recordings that didn't make their ill-fated final album, "People Like Us"; and another version of "Me and My Uncle." ~ Richie Unterberger
エディション : Reissue

  1. 1.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      Devil's On The Loose

      アーティスト: John Phillips

    2. 2.
      Mister Blue

      アーティスト: John Phillips

    3. 3.
      Black Broadway

      アーティスト: John Phillips

    4. 4.
      Chinatown

      アーティスト: John Phillips

    5. 5.
      Too Bad

      アーティスト: John Phillips

    6. 6.
      Marooned (Double Parked)

      アーティスト: John Phillips

    7. 7.
      Jack Of Diamonds (Me And My Uncle)

      アーティスト: John Phillips

    8. 8.
      Revolution On Vacation

      アーティスト: John Phillips

    9. 9.
      Campy California (Aerospace)

      アーティスト: John Phillips

    10. 10.
      Cup Of Tea (Kyjacked)

      アーティスト: John Phillips

    11. 11.
      Yesterday I Left The Earth

      アーティスト: John Phillips

    12. 12.
      Stepping To The Stars/Penthouse Of Your Mind

      アーティスト: John Phillips

    13. 13.
      Flawless Space

      アーティスト: John Phillips

    14. 14.
      Last Of The Unnatural Acts

      アーティスト: John Phillips

    15. 15.
      First And Last Thing You Do (Holland Tunnel)

      アーティスト: John Phillips

    16. 16.
      Fantastic Four

      アーティスト: John Phillips

    17. 17.
      Honeymoon (No Dough)

      アーティスト: John Phillips

    18. 18.
      Me And My Uncle

      アーティスト: John Phillips

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: John Phillips

商品の紹介

No Depression - "[A]s a stand-alone confluence of early '70s styles in the hands of a talented songwriter, it's a great discovery." Uncut - 3 stars out of 5 -- "[T]he extravagant ambition and bountiful imagination triumph over the chemical savages."
Rovi

Although John Phillips record releases virtually ground to a halt after his 1970 solo debut album, he did continue recording intermittently in the '70s. The 13 tracks forming the core of Jack of Diamonds are an approximation of how a second Phillips solo LP might have sounded, pieced together from various sessions in 1972 and 1973. Phillips made a great contribution to mid-'60s pop/rock as chief songwriter for the Mamas & the Papas, and to be harsh, this batch of tunes is not only weak in comparison, but also finds him losing his central threads of stylistic identity. Maybe it has something to do with the confusion of finding his music increasingly out of step with the times, but much of this is pretty lethargic, nearly faceless, early-'70s singer/songwriter fodder. Sometimes inspired by the time he was spending in New York, the songs reflect a vague sense of dislocation, discontent, and sketches of slightly odd characters and milieus without connecting deeply. As a solo singer, he seems inadequate to the task of fully expressing the complexities he apparently wants to probe. The instrumentation is a too-tame form of laid-back jazzy early-'70s rock, despite (or because) of the presence of pros like Jim W. Gordon, Van Dyke Parks, and some of the Crusaders. "Jack of Diamonds," aka "Me and My Uncle," is a real good song, but you won't know it from the lounge-ish reading he gives it here, and it's terribly inferior to the versions cut by Dino Valenti, Judy Collins, and Mike Wilhelm. The five cuts designated as bonus tracks -- not intended for a second Phillips album, but recorded between 1970 and 1973 -- are both different in mood and a little more satisfying, including the two songs he contributed to Robert Altman's eccentric movie Brewster McCloud; a couple Mamas & the Papas recordings that didn't make their ill-fated final album, "People Like Us"; and another version of "Me and My Uncle." ~ Richie Unterberger|
Rovi

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