Now on CD -- Finally
September 21, 2006
The compact disc is so ubiquitous that it's hard to
remember when it was a novelty and more rare than SACDs are today. Back in the early days
of the CD, magazines would publish "Now on CD" lists to let readers know which
pre-CD-era recordings they could now buy on shiny disc. Those lists have long been
obsolete because so many recordings originally on LP have made it to CD. However, there
are still a few notable holdouts, two of which have made it to CD over two decades after
their initial releases.
Ellen Foley's Spirit of
St. Louis [Sony 4949792] is an oddball. Foley, a St. Louis native, is best known for
singing opposite Meat Loaf on "Paradise by the Dashboard Light" and as part of
the cast of the NBC sitcom Night Court -- a curious combo to be sure. In the early
'80s, Foley dated Mick Jones, guitarist and co-leader of the Clash. Jones and Joe Strummer
wrote six of the songs on Spirit of St. Louis, and they are the reason to buy this
CD. The album has an ethereal artsiness that gets in the way of some fine songs, but the
Strummer/Jones contributions are a strong backbone. US buyers will have to pay a premium
for this CD; it's a domestic release only in Japan. What, Sony puts out too many CDs here
in the US that they couldn't include this one?
I went to a Warren Zevon
concert in the mid-'90s that became part of a live album, Learning to Flinch [Giant
24493]. Zevon played solo in a small venue with just his piano, guitar and a computer for
backing samples. When Zevon died three years ago, his first live album, 1980's Stand in
the Fire, recorded at the Roxy in Los Angeles, had not been released on CD. This is
one of Zevon's very best albums, capturing the offbeat humor of many of his best-known
songs, which were embellished with impromptu lyrics. Stand in the Fire was released
on CD earlier this year [Vivid Sound Japan 279], and, like Spirit of St. Louis,
it's an import that costs around $40. Zevon's 1982 album The Envoy [Vivid Sound
Japan 280] was released on CD at the same time.
With these recordings down, I'm now waiting for T-Bone
Burnett's Proof Through the Night to make it to CD. It's another early-'80s
release, so there's hope....Marc Mickelson, editor@soundstage.com
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