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Al Stewart (Year of the Cat)
@ the Royal Albert Hall
15 October 2013
Click an image to enlarge.
Biography
Ask Al Stewart to sum up where he is now, musically
speaking, and you’re likely to wind up two steps behind where
you started; this is by no means an unusual circumstance in conversation
with Stewart, keenly aware as he is that making a leap forward often
entails taking a step backward. Sometimes it’s into the library
stacks where the late historian Ms. Tuchman dug for material. Sometimes
it’s into the record stacks where the late rocker Mr. Cochran
made his mark as a teenager singing his “Summertime Blues”
so many summertime’s ago.
In many ways, the summertime of Stewart’s
2009 much more resembled his summer of 1969 than it did the summer
of 1979, when his multi-million-selling “Year of the Cat”
and “Time Passages” were staples of FM radio, and he
was touring with saxes, synths, singers, and all the accoutrements
pop stardom brings. “I don’t think I ever knew how to
be in front of a band,” says Stewat, a little modestly. “I
always felt I was loitering there while they were doing all the
work.”
With the release of “Uncorked,” Stewart
and musical partner Dave Nachmanoff take a trip through Stewart’s
musical back pages, both in terms of the musical catalogue (they
did have nearly 20 albums’ worth of songs to pick from), and
in terms of performance style. After all, Al made his bones in the
massively fertile folk scene that was London in the late ’60s,
and he numbers among his contemporaries the likes of guitar wizards
Bert Jansch and John Renbourn, singer-songwriters Roy (“Hats
Off To”) Harper and Richard Thompson, and a former flatmate
named Paul Simon, who went on to some celebrity upon returning to
America.
Recorded live during a springtime East Coast swing,
“Uncorked” is the first live acoustic disc Stewart’s
done since 1992’s “Rhymes In Rooms,” and both
he and Nachmanoff made a conscious decision not to replicate any
of the tracks from that disc, even if it meant leaving off such
standards as “On the Border” and the two aforementioned
Top 40 hits. “Because I’ve learned all of Al’s
songs, we had an opportunity to revisit some of the tunes that hadn’t
been featured in more recent years,” says Nachmanoff. “I
think at this point, we can actually do three or four full shows
and never play the same songs twice. And while Al usually comes
in to a gig with a set list in mind, often times, we’ll just
throw it out and go with the flow.”
As a consequence, it sounds like the duo isn’t
merely playing well (fact is, Stewart’s guitar work is actually
even better now than it was back in the day, thanks to the acoustic
touring configuration that brings his musical contributions more
to the fore), it sounds like they’re having fun. And if the
title tracks from albums like “Last Days of the Century and
Bedsitter Images” don’t immediately conjure images of
major-label milestones, that’s just fine with Stewart. “It’s
much more enjoyable for me to hear myself and for the audience to
hear the words,” says Stewart. “And the audience
seems to agree. The way I look at it, if I can still get everybody
on their hind legs at the end of a show cheering, then I’ve
won.”
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