词条 | The Crave |
释义 |
| name = The Crave | type = Studio | artist = Stephen Dale Petit | cover = The Crave Stephen Dale Petit.jpg | alt = | released = 26 July 2010 | recorded = 2009–2010 | venue = | studio = | genre = Blues, New blues, Blues rock | length = {{Duration|m=67|s=49}} | language = English | label = 333 Records | producer = Stephen Dale Petit/ Ian Grimble | prev_title = Guitararama | prev_year = 2008 | next_title = The BBC Sessions | next_year = 2011 }} The Crave is the second studio album by Stephen Dale Petit released on the 26 July 2010. It features guest appearances from former Rolling Stones guitarist Mick Taylor, original Rolling Stones bassist and Pretty Things guitarist Dick Taylor and keyboardist Max Middleton. The album contains original material and covers of staple songs within the Blues genre. Covers include versions of Albert King's "As The Years Go Passing By", "Need Your Love So Bad" (most famously covered by Fleetwood Mac) a re-interpretation of Robert Johnson's "Cross Road Blues" (covered by Cream) as well as a reworked version of Bob Dylan's "Obviously Five Believers" with new lyrics. Speaking to Blues Matters Magazine, Petit addressed the potential controversy involved with re-working seminal, "sacred" blues recordings: "These songs were dead. My so-called desecration [of the original versions] was an act of love. I feel a wonderment and enchantment about these songs, which is why I recorded them. If the blues is to grow and thrive it has to evolve." [1] Recording and productionRecording sessions for The Crave took place at Chapel Studios, Lincoln and 2 kHz Studios, London. The Crave was produced by Stephen Dale Petit and mixed by Jim Spencer (New Order, Johnny Marr, The Vaccines) and Ian Grimble (The Clash, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Manic Street Preachers). Additional recording took place at British Grove Studios, Metropolis Studios, and The Smokehouse and at Petit's home studio. Guest appearancesFormer Rolling Stone Mick Taylor features on slide guitar on "Slide". Dick Taylor of The Pretty Things and formerly of The Rolling Stones plays bass on "Need Your Love So Bad". Keyboardist Max Middleton features on final track "Hole in My Soul". String arrangements for The Crave were orchestrated by Chris Elliot (Amy Winehouse, David Gray, Adele). Rolling Stone Ronnie Wood appears on album opener "3 Gunslingers" in the form of a pre-recorded answer phone message that features at the intro of the song, which was inspired by an evening in late 2009 which Petit spent with Wood and Eric Clapton driving around North London in Petit's car. The song's lyrics chronicle that evening.[2] The song is reworked version of "Obviously Five Believers" by Bob Dylan with new lyrics. Concept and influencesIn keeping with his long-standing and well-publicised mission to incite a "New Blues Revolution", Petit has stated that his primary goal with the album was to "explore different ways of approaching and presenting the blues",[3] and avoid re-creating stereotypes within the genre: "There are a lot of contemporary blues albums that adhere to predictable conventions: certain production values, arrangements, sonic cliches, stereotypical lyrical things and so on. I had zero interest in making an album like that… I wanted the music coming out of the speakers to sound like it was, say, 1935 or 1954 or whenever and 2010 simultaneously." [1] The Crave was celebrated by critics for its musical diversity. Classic Rock magazine described the album as moving "from Gospel to Punk via several shades of Boogie".[1] Petit stated that he intended The Crave' to serve as a wide-lens view of the Blues as a genre, demonstrating its presence in a wide variety of genres and demonstrating the widespread influence of the Blues on other genres. Speaking to Classic Rock Magazine about the album's re-interpretation of Tupac Shakur's hip-hop classic "California Love", Petit said: "The hypnotic riff in California [Love] was sampled from a Joe Cocker song called 'Woman to Woman'. That riff is Deep Blues. Blues is at the core of Tupac's song. If people can't hear that… Well, you know, there were people in the 50s and 60s who said that electric blues, city blues, was not blues, thereby discounting the entire Chess Records catalogue."[1]ArtworkThe album sleeve features a vibrant, contemporary design. Petit wanted to present the album in a way that was visually exciting, avoiding the usual presentation cliches associated with the blues genre: "I wanted to push boundaries and get up [blues] purist's noses because if purists have it their way, the music goes nowhere. It just dies." The cover was designed by award winning multi-media artist Oli Max. The remainder of the album's artwork and packaging were designed by Monosapien and Olimax. Critical receptionThe album marked an expansion of critical recognition from blues-centric publications into the mainstream press for Petit and his music. Upon the album's release, Petit was featured in The Times, MOJO, The Independent, The Sunday Times, Classic Rock and The Express, with the general consensus being that The Crave signalled his evolution and maturation as an artist. Blues Matters Magazine said: "[Petit] has expanded his playing, developed his songwriting and really delivered some fine numbers. His playing is dynamite, his vocals are exultant… This is absolutely the most personal album that has been released this year and possibly the most important – simply brilliant." [2] The album was listed in Classic Rock magazine's "50 Best Albums Of The Year".[4] "Cali Guitar Hero starts Blues Renaissance" said MOJO Magazine, continuing that "The Crave puts the blues in a contemporary context." [5] The Times praised the album's "raw, fresh energy" [6] and The Sunday Times Culture Magazine ran a lengthy feature on Petit and The Crave. The Sunday Mirror called Petit "a guitar sensation" [7] and Time Out London labelled him a "new blues revolutionary".[8] The Crave also received widespread positive reviews online. Loudhorizon.com wrote: "The Crave is a seventeen track masterpiece. This album should see Petit vie for King of the Blues title." [9] BRFM.com likened The Crave to seminal album London Calling by The Clash: "[The Crave is] Fabulous. The mastery of styles had me thinking of London Calling by The Clash. By the time the last song finishes all you can do is hit repeat." [10]Track listingAll songs were written by Stephen Dale Petit, except where noted.
Personnel
References1. ^1 2 3 {{cite journal|last1=Petit|first1=Stephen|last2=Fielder|first2=Hugh|title=High Hopes – Stephen Dale Petit|journal=Classic Rock Magazine|date=September 2010|page=P23}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Crave}}2. ^1 {{cite journal|last1=Snipper|first1=Andy|title=Stephen Dale Petit The Crave Review|journal=Blues Matters Magazine|date=October 2010|page=110}} 3. ^{{cite journal|last1=Petit|first1=Stephen|last2=Fielder|first2=Hugh|title=Stephen Dale Petit Interview|journal=Blues Matters Magazine|date=August 2010|issue= 54|page=P18}} 4. ^{{cite journal|last1=Mitchell|first1=Ed|title=The Critics' Choice: 50 Best Albums of 2010|journal=Classic Rock Magazine|date=January 2011|pages=106}} 5. ^{{cite journal|last1=Waring|first1=Charles|title=Also Rising|journal=MOJO|date=November 2010|pages=97}} 6. ^{{cite journal|last1=Sinclair|first1=David|title=Stephen Dale Petit 100 Club|journal=The Times|date=December 2010}} 7. ^{{cite journal|last1=Shenton|first1=Zoe|title=Guitar Sensation at London's Groucho Club|journal=The Sunday Mirror|date=2 November 2010}} 8. ^{{cite journal|last1=Lawrence|first1=Eddy|title=Stephen Dale Petit|journal=Time Out|date=25 November 2010}} 9. ^{{cite web|last1=Williams|first1=John|title=Stephen Dale Petit – Taking the blues into 2011|url=http://www.buzzinmusic.co.uk/stephen-dale-petit-taking-the-blues-into-2011/3675|website=buzzinmusic|accessdate=22 November 2015}} 10. ^{{cite web|title=Stephen Dale Petit to play residency at 100 Club|url=http://rhythmbooze.tumblr.com/post/119426487591/stephen-dale-petit-to-play-residency-at-100-club|website=Rhythm & Booze|accessdate=22 November 2015}} 2 : Stephen Dale Petit albums|2010 albums |
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