Title: Back to the Cat
Release date: 22 April, 2008
Record label: Central Control
Single: Spend A Little Time
Official website: Barry Adamson
Wikipedia: Barry Adamson
the beaten side of town
straight ‘til sunrise
spend a little time
shadow of death hotel
i could love you
walk on fire
flight
civilization
people
psycho_sexual
Home » b » Barry Adamson » Album» Back to the Cat
Somewhere between Dan the Automater, Ennio Morricone, and Leonard Cohen, lies Barry Adamson. Over a wide-ranging career as a film composer, a founding member of both Magazine and Nick Cave’s Bad Seeds, and a solo artist, his music has continuously looked to the future. However, Back to the Cat, Adamson’s 7th record, finds him looking to the past, gaining inspiration from some of his favorite artists from the past 50 years.
Not that Adamson is aping anyone on this record; you can hear strains of Elvis or Jacques Brel, but it remains unmistakably Barry Adamson. Just one track, “Shadow Of Death Hotel,” manages to seamlessly stitch together the sounds of a guitar and flute from a ‘70s funk song, Jackie Mittoo’s keyboards, the horn section from the Mike Hammer theme, and some Butch-Vig-ish fuzzed out guitars. By the next track, he’s on to channeling Al Green. Other touchstones include Curtis Mayfield, Leonard Cohen, Serge Gainsbourg, and more.
Barry premiered this album in full at the recent London Jazz Festival (the least "jazz" thing there, by far), headlining two sold-out nights at the Queen Elizabeth Hall. The album went over amazingly.
press quotes
“Delivered with a bravura that makes it work a treat” The Independent
A chaotic jazz-funk shuffle . . . brass-backed, sixties-style soul . . . breezy country-and-western . . . swampy Southern States blues – [Adamson’s] new songs shone brightest” The Times of London
biography
Dig this:
What you are about to hear is the work of one of the most original, inventive and distinctive voices in British contemporary music at the height of his considerable powers. With a full consignment of brass and strings and a wealth of musicology behind him, Barry Adamson is about to take you on an epic adventure in sound. It’s time to get Back To The Cat.
Barry’s eighth album is where it all comes together, a life’s passions poured into ten tracks that at once sound strangely familiar and yet dazzlingly new. A musical odyssey through noir jazz, sun-drenched pop ballads, fractious urban funk, devilish gospel, heavenly blues and subversive soul... not to mention a Hammond organ salute to the late, great Jimmy Smith.
As befits the man who invented the idea of the imaginary soundtrack album with his 1988 solo debut Moss Side Story, every song is rendered in vivid widescreen, with a narrative as compulsive as an Alfred Hitchcock chiller. With a wicked sense of humour and a beady eye for detail, Barry charts the complexity and duplicity of human nature, often deliberately contrasting stories with sounds.
Back To The Cat takes you places you never expected to go. ‘Straight ‘Til Sunrise’, for instance, sounds like some lost, late-Sixties Bacharach swinger – until police sirens bring the listener’s attention to the fact that the narrator appears to be fleeing a murder scene. ‘Walk on Fire’ is a hot, sexy funk of a song about the madness of desire; and ‘Civilization’ a heady gospel lament from an incarcerated Prince of Darkness. ‘I Could Love You’ comes over like a righteous Sam Cooke lament, which somehow manages to sneak in a wink to David Bowie’s blue-eyed soul. There is even a mournful steel guitar to breathe a country sigh over the archly amusing ‘People’.
Book-ended – or maybe taken full circle – with the heady, big-band jazz of ‘The Beaten Side of Town’ and ‘Psycho_Sexual’, the album relates the perils of desire, murder, envy, rage, love, lust and divinity across a vast lyrical landscape between the city and the desert, the slums and the stars.
Back To The Cat – which was debuted live with the BA Big Band on the South Bank last November as part of Barry’s curatorship of London Jazz Festival – has been informed by Barry’s love of some of the greatest musicians of the past 50 years. From Sly Stone to Charles Mingus, Roxy Music to Miles Davis, Jimmy Webb to Quincy Jones and beyond… You’ll hear their inspiring echoes in the grooves as each tune propels you towards the dancefloor. But only one man could put the whole lot of them together without the aid of a sampler and turn it all into his own, joyously infectious vision of what a perfect record should be.
Barry Adamson has been doing things differently ever since he strapped on a bass guitar to play for Magazine as a teenager in late Seventies Manchester. Five seminal post-punk albums later, he went on to play a vital part in Nick Cave’s Bad Seeds, learning every instrument and recording technique he could along the way. In 1987 he was ready to step out alone, with a reinvention of Elmer Bernstein’s ‘The Man With The Golden Arm’, echoes of which can still be caught in the fevered pulse of ‘The Beaten Side of Town’.
Barry was thinking Big Screen and from his imagination and the streets of his hometown he conjured Moss Side Story. The album so effectively told the story of a film that doesn’t exist that it wasn’t long before calls were coming in from David Lynch, Allison Anders and Derek Jarman. The following Soul Murder was nominated for the Mercury Prize in 1992 and also caught the ear of Oliver Stone, who lifted three tracks in sequence for his groundbreaking movie Natural Born Killers.
Barry would continue to alternate between writing soundtracks and the acclaimed albums Oepdipus Schmoedipus (1995), As Above, So Below (1998), The Murky World of Barry Adamson (1999), The King of Nothing Hill (2002) and Stranger on the Sofa (2006). While exploring new sounds and styles with each release, Barry’s lyrics continued to investigate the themes closest to his heart: identity, sexuality, race, spirituality, society and the all façades in between. His ongoing fascination with pop culture, graphic design, film, art, crime and outsider fiction have constantly brought new angles and details to be poured over by a constantly fascinated and fascinating mind.
Back To The Cat reflects a life’s dedication to the Big Themes both in music and life. It is The Big One – the boldest, most brilliant album of his career.
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