Tracklist
| Mr. Wilson | |
| Taking It All Away | |
| Dirty-Ass Rock 'N' Roll | |
| Darling I Need You | |
| Rollaroll | |
| Heartbreak Hotel | |
| Ski Patrol | |
| I'm Not The Loving Kind | |
| Guts | |
| The Jeweller |
Crédits (12)
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John Cale Arranged By, Producer, Composed By, Piano, Organ, Clavinet, Vocals -
John Wood Engineer, Executive-Producer -
Pat Donaldson Bass -
Michael Wade (2) Design
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Gerry Conway Drums -
Timi Donald Drums -
Vic Gamm Engineer
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Chris Spedding Guitar -
Phil Manzanera Guitar -
Keith Morris (8) Photography By -
Brian Eno Synthesizer -
Chris Thomas Violin, Electric Piano
Versions (29)
Recommandations
Avis Afficher Les 6 Avis
ValeHall
14 octobre 2016
en référence à Slow Dazzle, CD, Album, RE, 846 069-2
The original vinyl LP version of The Jeweller is different. It's shorter and the the music is much more subdued. Why was this longer version put on the CD?
rhorhorho
12 août 2016
en référence à Slow Dazzle, CD, Album, RE, IMCD 202, 846 069-2
My copy has Matrix / Runout 846 069 2C 00A and says Made in France by Cinram Optical Discs.
Mastering SID Code: IFPI LV26
Mould SID Code: IFPI 0238
Mastering SID Code: IFPI LV26
Mould SID Code: IFPI 0238
sunset123
16 août 2013
en référence à Slow Dazzle, LP, Album, RE, 180, 900266
Sylvia Said was recorded during the sessions for "Fear"
sunset123
11 mai 2013
en référence à Slow Dazzle, CD, Album, Ltd, RM, ILPS-9717, CFU0362, 850703003620
contains the shortened version of "The Jeweller" as did the original USA LP
BadCatRecord
23 août 2008
en référence à Slow Dazzle, LP, Album, RE, ILPS 9317
Mind you there's no way you'd ever mistake John Cale for ABBA, or a similar top-40 pop act, but 1975's "Slow Dazzle" was the album where I discovered he was more than an en avant-garde crackpot ... Self-produced with exceptional backing from Brian Eno, Phil Manzanera, Chris Spedding and others, the collection of largely original material sported a strange mixture of punk paranoia, old fashioned commercial pop and rock moves, and occasional nods to his more experimental roots. Yeah, I know that sounds like an impossible combination for anyone to pull off, but Cale somehow found the recipe. Ironically some critics actually slammed the set as being too commercial, demanding a return to his more experimental endeavors. The album started out with 'Mr. Wilson' which was a fawning tribute to Brian Wilson and the Beach Boys (who would've ever thought Cale was a fan) and stood as one of Cale's best and most commercial compositions - love the way he sings Californ-EYE-A. Hard to believe it wasn't a hit single. The same was true for the ballad 'I'm Not the Loving Kind' (easily his prettiest ballad) and and the unexpected pop ditty 'Ski Patrol'. Elsewhere tracks like 'Dirtyass Rock 'n' Roll' (sporting his best Bob Dylan impression) and 'Guts' (a tale of marital infidelity that featured some of Cale's most disturbing lyrics including a chorus thatI've always heard as 'he's got no guts - and stitches don't help at all'), aptly displayed Cale could rock out as hard as any of his competitors. Other highlights included the positively blood chilling cover of 'Heartbreak Hotel' (every time I hear the Presley version I now think about Cale's cover version), 'Taking It All Away' and 'Darling I Need You' (both sporting incideously catchy choruses). To be honest, the only track that didn't strike a chord with me was the bleak story teller narrative closer 'The Jeweller'. Interesting while most critics seem to gravitate to "Fear" which was the first release in Cale's Island Trilogy, this is the LP that I find the most appealing and enjoyable. Well worth checking out !!!
epiphanyxxio
18 août 2020The mix of "The Jeweller" in this version is different from original LP.