Alex Chilton: Free Again: The 1970 Sessions
Free Again: The 1970 Sessions
CD
CD (Compact Disc)
Herkömmliche CD, die mit allen CD-Playern und Computerlaufwerken, aber auch mit den meisten SACD- oder Multiplayern abspielbar ist.
lieferbar innerhalb 1-2 Wochen
(soweit verfügbar beim Lieferanten)
(soweit verfügbar beim Lieferanten)
EUR 15,99*
Verlängerter Rückgabezeitraum bis 31. Januar 2025
Alle zur Rückgabe berechtigten Produkte, die zwischen dem 1. bis 31. Dezember 2024 gekauft wurden, können bis zum 31. Januar 2025 zurückgegeben werden.
- Label: Ace
- Bestellnummer: 1722286
- Erscheinungstermin: 30.1.2012
Weitere Ausgaben von Free Again: The 1970 Sessions
Der frühere Lead Sänger der Box Tops (‘The Letter‘) und spätere Gründer
der wohl mit besten Band der 1970er Jahre Big Star, nahm 1969 seine ersten Solo-Takes in den Ardent Studios auf, die aber erst in den 90er Jahren unter dem Titel ‘1970‘ veröffentlicht wurden. Diese Songs bezeugen bereits Können und Eigentümlichkeit, die seiner Karriere bis zu seinem plötzlichen Tod 2010 charakterisierten.
Das Album wurde ursprünglich für eine Veröffentlichung bei Atlantic bzw. dem Label der Beach Boys Brother Records eingespielt, wozu es aber nicht kam. Es beinhaltet eine facettenreiche Auswahl an größtenteils eigenem Material mit dem kommerziellen ‘Free Again‘, dem prototypischen Big-Star Sound auf ‘Somethin Deep Inside‘ und den großartigen Balladen ‘Every Day As We Grow Closer‘ und ‘The EMI Song‘.
Die erweiterte Neuauflage von Big Beat beinhaltet zum einen unveröffentlichte Mono Versionen und neu abgemischte Remixe sowie 3 bislang nie gehörte Songs. Im Booklet finden sich tiefgehende Informationen von Alec Palao und bislang unveröffentlichte Fotos, die helfen dieses unterbewertete Schmuckstück mit anderen Augen zu betrachten.
Time has been most kind to the transitional set of recordings Alex Chilton made in 1969, those that have subsequently become known as “1970”. A moment caught between the dying embers of the Box Tops and the incipient birth of Big Star, these exploratory sessions have the heady and compelling air of an artist breaking away from stylistic restraint to seek their own true voice. And this newly refurbished edition further illuminates a fascinating period in the career of one of pop’s most enigmatic talents.
As a habitué of the Ardent studio on National Street in Memphis in the late 1960s, Chilton had become friendly with youthful engineer Terry Manning, and together the duo hatched a plan to feature Chilton on a set of his own songs. Pitched unsuccessfully to Atlantic, the incomplete album lay dormant for a quarter-century, with only fragments circulating on lo-fi cassette amongst Big Star and Chilton completists. In 1996, Manning remixed the recordings and presented them on Ardent as the “1970” album, so-called because there was residual nervousness over the fact that, at the time the sessions occurred, Alex was still technically a Box Top. “Free Again: The ‘1970’ Sessions” appends that first release with bonus material for a reappraisal of what is, frankly, an overlooked gem.
The core songs of the project are revealed as embodying the same diversion that Chilton would often exhibit in his post-Big Star career. They run the gamut of joy, elation, introspection and musical perversity, but it is clear that, as much as he was finding his feet musically, Alex understood that the song was key, and for the most part, his songcraft was already remarkable. The lilting country rock of ‘The Happy Song’, the tough pop of ‘Something Deep Inside’, the jagged soul of ‘I Can Dig It’ – just three examples of his confident ability in any genre he should care to tackle. Manning’s unobtrusive production brought out the best of the material, particularly on a pair of gorgeous ballads, ‘Every Day As We Get Closer’ and ‘The EMI Song (Smile For Me)’. One tune in particular intended for the original album was left off the 1996 release, for reasons that become fairly apparent upon first listen. ‘All We Ever Got From Them Is Pain’ is a shockingly personal item that the singer originally declined to make public, but it resonates with the brutal honesty that can later be traced in “Third” and other Big Star material.
The reissue of the “1970” recordings had been in discussion for some time before Alex’s unexpected death in 2010. The handsome clear vinyl LP approximates the shape the project might have taken, had it come out as intended at the time. During the research for Big Beat’s “Thank You Friends: The Ardent Records Story”, original mono mixes for some of the songs from the sessions were located in the studio’s vault. These have been added to the CD line-up, as well as a new Manning remix of the title song, featuring the alternative vocal track Chilton quixotically overdubbed in the 1980s. As a further bonus, there are two previously unheard Alex publishing demos. Presented in conjunction with our friends Omnivore in the US, “Free Again: The ‘1970’ Sessions” is the last word on this brief but fascinating moment in Alex Chilton’s fulsome body of work.
By Alec Palao
Das Album wurde ursprünglich für eine Veröffentlichung bei Atlantic bzw. dem Label der Beach Boys Brother Records eingespielt, wozu es aber nicht kam. Es beinhaltet eine facettenreiche Auswahl an größtenteils eigenem Material mit dem kommerziellen ‘Free Again‘, dem prototypischen Big-Star Sound auf ‘Somethin Deep Inside‘ und den großartigen Balladen ‘Every Day As We Grow Closer‘ und ‘The EMI Song‘.
Die erweiterte Neuauflage von Big Beat beinhaltet zum einen unveröffentlichte Mono Versionen und neu abgemischte Remixe sowie 3 bislang nie gehörte Songs. Im Booklet finden sich tiefgehende Informationen von Alec Palao und bislang unveröffentlichte Fotos, die helfen dieses unterbewertete Schmuckstück mit anderen Augen zu betrachten.
Product Information
Time has been most kind to the transitional set of recordings Alex Chilton made in 1969, those that have subsequently become known as “1970”. A moment caught between the dying embers of the Box Tops and the incipient birth of Big Star, these exploratory sessions have the heady and compelling air of an artist breaking away from stylistic restraint to seek their own true voice. And this newly refurbished edition further illuminates a fascinating period in the career of one of pop’s most enigmatic talents.
As a habitué of the Ardent studio on National Street in Memphis in the late 1960s, Chilton had become friendly with youthful engineer Terry Manning, and together the duo hatched a plan to feature Chilton on a set of his own songs. Pitched unsuccessfully to Atlantic, the incomplete album lay dormant for a quarter-century, with only fragments circulating on lo-fi cassette amongst Big Star and Chilton completists. In 1996, Manning remixed the recordings and presented them on Ardent as the “1970” album, so-called because there was residual nervousness over the fact that, at the time the sessions occurred, Alex was still technically a Box Top. “Free Again: The ‘1970’ Sessions” appends that first release with bonus material for a reappraisal of what is, frankly, an overlooked gem.
The core songs of the project are revealed as embodying the same diversion that Chilton would often exhibit in his post-Big Star career. They run the gamut of joy, elation, introspection and musical perversity, but it is clear that, as much as he was finding his feet musically, Alex understood that the song was key, and for the most part, his songcraft was already remarkable. The lilting country rock of ‘The Happy Song’, the tough pop of ‘Something Deep Inside’, the jagged soul of ‘I Can Dig It’ – just three examples of his confident ability in any genre he should care to tackle. Manning’s unobtrusive production brought out the best of the material, particularly on a pair of gorgeous ballads, ‘Every Day As We Get Closer’ and ‘The EMI Song (Smile For Me)’. One tune in particular intended for the original album was left off the 1996 release, for reasons that become fairly apparent upon first listen. ‘All We Ever Got From Them Is Pain’ is a shockingly personal item that the singer originally declined to make public, but it resonates with the brutal honesty that can later be traced in “Third” and other Big Star material.
The reissue of the “1970” recordings had been in discussion for some time before Alex’s unexpected death in 2010. The handsome clear vinyl LP approximates the shape the project might have taken, had it come out as intended at the time. During the research for Big Beat’s “Thank You Friends: The Ardent Records Story”, original mono mixes for some of the songs from the sessions were located in the studio’s vault. These have been added to the CD line-up, as well as a new Manning remix of the title song, featuring the alternative vocal track Chilton quixotically overdubbed in the 1980s. As a further bonus, there are two previously unheard Alex publishing demos. Presented in conjunction with our friends Omnivore in the US, “Free Again: The ‘1970’ Sessions” is the last word on this brief but fascinating moment in Alex Chilton’s fulsome body of work.
By Alec Palao
- Tracklisting
Disk 1 von 1 (CD)
- 1 Free again (original mono mix)
- 2 Come on honey
- 3 Something deep inside
- 4 I can dig it
- 5 The EMI song
- 6 All I really want is money
- 7 The happy song
- 8 Jumping Jack flash
- 9 Every day as we grow closer/Funky national
- 10 I wish I could meet Elvis
- 11 Just to see you
- 12 All we ever got from them was pain
- 13 Sugar, sugar/I got the feelin
- 14 Free again (stereo remix alt. vocal)
- 15 Every day as we grow closer (original mono mix)
- 16 Come on honey (original mono mix)
- 17 The EMI song (original mono mix)
- 18 All I really want is money (original mono mix)
- 19 If you would marry me babe (demo)
- 20 It isn´t always that easy (demo)
Alex Chilton
Free Again: The 1970 Sessions
EUR 15,99*