Rock/Pop
CDアルバム

Learning To Fall

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フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 2023年06月09日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルInnovative Multimedi
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 IVMU577622
SKU 618446577620

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:45:16

  1. 1.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      Better Man
    2. 2.
      Our Last Chance
    3. 3.
      Learning to Fall
    4. 4.
      I Don't Believe in Yesterday
    5. 5.
      The Smile of a Worried Man
    6. 6.
      Lifeline
    7. 7.
      You Can Tell Me Anything
    8. 8.
      Purpose
    9. 9.
      A Place Where I Belong
    10. 10.
      I Still Believe
    11. 11.
      Learning to Fall Again

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Lowen & NavarroPhil Parlapiano

商品の紹介

Since Eric Lowen was diagnosed with ALS during the recording of Lowen & Navarros fifth new studio album, All the Time in the World, in 2004, it would have been reasonable to assume that the disc was the last one the duo would make. But if the advance of Lowens disease is inexorable, its speed is not, and five years later Lowen & Navarro have played numerous concerts and managed further recordings, notably 2006s Hogging the Covers, which, as its title indicates, consists of their versions of songs written by others. Still, Learning to Fall inevitably will be their final effort together. Listeners sometimes thought they could discern hints of Lowens circumstances on All the Time in the World, even though nearly all its songs were written prior to his diagnosis. Learning to Fall, on the other hand, necessarily has a reflective and even elegiac tone. That tone is not so unusual to Lowen & Navarros work, however. As early as their fourth album, Scratch at the Door, they were concerned with lifes struggles, and while they may be a bit more philosophical here, they are the same songwriters. Although they write together and separately (and with others), it seems appropriate to comment on those sentiments as a whole since they are consistent throughout the album. Indeed, Dan Navarro takes part in the rueful self-assessments that make up so many of the songs, particularly on "I Dont Believe in Yesterday," which he wrote by himself. Inevitably, however, it is Lowen whose expression carries the most weight, notably on the albums title track, with its chorus "Ive had to run/Ive had to crawl/Been rich as a king/Had nothing at all/Still raising hell/And tearing down walls/I know where I stand/Im learning to fall." Lowen faces his fate with amazing equanimity here and elsewhere, even as he admits in "The Smile of a Worried Man" that he is "staring down the barrel of a loaded gun." Some comfort may be offered by the support system on display on the album. The duos longtime keyboardist Phil Parlapiano has been promoted to album cover credit, and Lowens diminishing capacity as a musician has been augmented by a raft of guest guitarists, Greg Leisz, Doug Pettibone, and Phil Hurley. Lowens singing voice may have lost some of its elasticity, but it has gained in gritty conviction, and he is joined on "Learning to Fall" by "the ALS Choir," full of friends and relatives. Finally, however, the album is a tribute to a long-term personal and professional partnership between two singer/songwriters who may at times have seemed like an odd couple (especially when the blond, six-foot-two Swedish descendant Lowen stood on-stage beside the dark-haired, five-foot-eight Latino Navarro), but who worked effectively together and who bring their recording career to a close on a satisfying high note here. ~ William Ruhlmann
Rovi

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