Ringo's Stroll Down Memory Lane...
Ringo Starr's music is oddly comfortable – like a chewed-up old pair of slippers or a ragged favorite jacket. As the odd man out in the Beatles, Starr's charisma and talent was too often overshadowed by the genius of John Lennon, the pop mastery of Paul McCartney, or the instrumental skills of George Harrison, never really given a proper showcase to shine. After the band's break-up, Starr joined his fellow Beatles in launching a solo career. Although he was, once again, usually upstaged by his more commercially-successful or more notorious former mates, Starr has nevertheless enjoyed a lengthy and productive career with his own music that has spanned four decades. For about five years, beginning with Starr's second solo album in 1970, the former Beatles drummer enjoyed a string of Top Ten hit singles and critically-acclaimed albums. It all began with Beaucoups Of Blues. Released in 1970, this was Ringo's "country" album. Recorded in
Not so with Starr's follow-up, 1973's Ringo. After a pair of obvious genre recordings (Starr's solo debut, Sentimental Journey, was a collection of standards from the '30s and '40s), Ringo went straight for the commercial jugular with the decidedly pop-rock-oriented Ringo. Calling for a little help from his friends, the album featured guests like all three of Starr's former Beatles bandmates, as well as glam-rock superstar Marc Bolan, Memphis soul guitarist Steve Cropper, singer Harry Nilsson, "fifth Beatle" Billy Preston, and almost the entire band the Band. The strategy worked well, pushing Ringo to number two on the pop charts and yielding four Top Ten singles. With the following year's Goodnight Vienna, Starr pursued a similar Beatlesque pop vein, working with most of the same folk, including the rest of the Fab Four, Sir Elton John, Dr. John, and guitarist Dennis Coffey. The album rose to number eight on the charts and cranked out three Top Ten hit singles.
From this point, however, Starr's commercial fortunes waned considerably, as each subsequent album suffered from dwindling levels of success. When the musician's early-80s albums stiffed horribly, he retreated from making records for a decade, returning with the imaginative Time Takes Time in 1992. Recording with younger musicians, members of the Posies and Jellyfish, both bands featuring sounds heavily influenced by the Beatles, the album sounded fresher and more immediate than anything that Starr had recorded in 15 years. Several live albums were subsequently released throughout the '90s, recorded with whatever All-Starr pick-up band that Ringo had recruited for that summer's sold-out tour.
When he followed Time Takes Time a few years later with the entertaining Vertical Man in 1998, it seemed that Starr had entered a new phase in his career which, in a manner of speaking, he did. Hooking up with musician/producer Mark Hudson of '70s pop band the Hudson Brothers, the synergy shared by the two seemed to produce magic in the studio. In retrospect, however, aside from Vertical Man, the studio albums produced by the pair were relatively lackluster collections of Beatlesque pop, largely devoid of ambition and appealing largely to the faithful.
When Starr and Hudson began work on what would become
The result is, perhaps, the most self-assured and open of Starr's recordings since the '70s, a solid if unspectacular collection of songs that serves the artist's legacy well. In other words, there's nothing here on Liverpool 8 that is going to challenge contemporary pop orthodoxy, tho' many of the young bands currently attempting to pull a gold nugget out of the mine shaft originally dug out 44 years ago by Starr and friends would do well to give these songs a spin and see how it's done by a couple of old pros like Starr and Stewart.
Obviously written for late singer Harry Nilsson, "Harry's Song" is a remarkably spot-on recreation of Nilsson's eccentric and unique style of pop, down to Starr's impressive vocal gymnastics and the song's odd, syncopated, multi-stylistic instrumentation. It's a fun song, and a fitting tribute to an old friend. "R U Ready" is a sort of country-Gospel look at the great beyond, an odd song with echoed vocals that sound like Starr is singing out of an old radio speaker. It's done tongue-in-cheek, but considering Starr's age and the fact that two of his former mates have already "crossed over," one has to wonder about the thoughts behind the song. It's an interesting piece, a modern interpretation of an old-timey sound.
Starr's vocals are what they are – limited, albeit friendly and easily recognizable – but one of the artist's strengths is that he has usually been able to infuse his songs with a small bit of his larger-than-life personality. As usual, Starr has recruited a top notch sessions band to record with and, indeed, at this point in his career, he usually has no problem calling on the services of just about any musician he wants to use.
Taken altogether,
So, what's the skinny on
(Click on the CD cover to buy Liverpool 8 from Amazon.com)
Labels: Beatles, Ringo Starr


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