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Michael Stanley|Michael Stanley

Michael Stanley

Michael Stanley

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It seems like many blue-collar rock & roll heroes of the 1970s and '80s got their start as folkies, and Cleveland legend Michael Stanley is one of them. His self-titled debut album was released in 1972, and it is a wildly mixed bag of introspective, acoustic folk-rock (a la James Taylor and others of that sensitive singer-songwriter ilk) and simple rock & roll. Stanley's potential was obvious, and this fact drew producer and Tumbleweed Records co-founder Bill Szymczyk, Joe Walsh, and other well-known musicians to the project. Stanley, Szymczyk, and Walsh went to Denver, assembled and briefly rehearsed an ad hoc band, and cut Michael Stanley in Los Angeles a week later. "Rosewood Bitters" opens the album, and it's still revered among Stanley fans. This relaxed, easygoing tune is based on acoustic guitar strumming and a sweet, gentle melody. Walsh plays slide guitar and Todd Rundgren adds clavinet. The country-flavored "Louisville A.D." features Rick Derringer on pedal steel guitar. "A Friend and Nothing More" slowly builds tension with slow piano, sparse acoustic guitar, resonant synthesizer, and steady drum parts. "Rock and Roll Man" is a conscious attempt to add a foot-stomper to the album, and Stanley forces his sneering vocals; luckily, Walsh redeems things with a piercing guitar solo. "Moving Right Along" is decent folk-rock enhanced by organ, flute, and guitar solos. A radically altered arrangement of Bob Dylan's "Subterranean Homesick Blues" closes the album. Stanley would release one more solo album before forming the Michael Stanley Band and becoming a superstar in Ohio, but it all began with the uneven yet promising Michael Stanley.
© Bret Adams /TiVo

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Michael Stanley

Michael Stanley

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1
Rosewood Bitters
00:04:41

Michael Stanley, Composer, MainArtist

2017 Michael Stanley 2017 Michael Stanley

2
Denver Rain
00:02:37

Michael Stanley, Composer, MainArtist

2017 Michael Stanley 2017 Michael Stanley

3
Louisville A.D.
00:03:58

Michael Stanley, Composer, MainArtist

2017 Michael Stanley 2017 Michael Stanley

4
A Friend and Nothing More
00:04:09

Michael Stanley, Composer, MainArtist

2017 Michael Stanley 2017 Michael Stanley

5
Rock & Roll Man
00:04:10

Michael Stanley, Composer, MainArtist

2017 Michael Stanley 2017 Michael Stanley

6
Moving Right Along
00:05:32

Michael Stanley, Composer, MainArtist

2017 Michael Stanley 2017 Michael Stanley

7
Resurrection
00:04:09

Michael Stanley, Composer, MainArtist

2017 Michael Stanley 2017 Michael Stanley

8
Good Time Charlie
00:03:10

Michael Stanley, Composer, MainArtist

2017 Michael Stanley 2017 Michael Stanley

9
Song for a Friend Soon Gone
00:04:00

Michael Stanley, Composer, MainArtist

2017 Michael Stanley 2017 Michael Stanley

10
Subterranean Homesick Blues
00:03:09

Bob Dylan, Composer - Michael Stanley, MainArtist

2017 Michael Stanley 2017 Michael Stanley

Resenha do Álbum

It seems like many blue-collar rock & roll heroes of the 1970s and '80s got their start as folkies, and Cleveland legend Michael Stanley is one of them. His self-titled debut album was released in 1972, and it is a wildly mixed bag of introspective, acoustic folk-rock (a la James Taylor and others of that sensitive singer-songwriter ilk) and simple rock & roll. Stanley's potential was obvious, and this fact drew producer and Tumbleweed Records co-founder Bill Szymczyk, Joe Walsh, and other well-known musicians to the project. Stanley, Szymczyk, and Walsh went to Denver, assembled and briefly rehearsed an ad hoc band, and cut Michael Stanley in Los Angeles a week later. "Rosewood Bitters" opens the album, and it's still revered among Stanley fans. This relaxed, easygoing tune is based on acoustic guitar strumming and a sweet, gentle melody. Walsh plays slide guitar and Todd Rundgren adds clavinet. The country-flavored "Louisville A.D." features Rick Derringer on pedal steel guitar. "A Friend and Nothing More" slowly builds tension with slow piano, sparse acoustic guitar, resonant synthesizer, and steady drum parts. "Rock and Roll Man" is a conscious attempt to add a foot-stomper to the album, and Stanley forces his sneering vocals; luckily, Walsh redeems things with a piercing guitar solo. "Moving Right Along" is decent folk-rock enhanced by organ, flute, and guitar solos. A radically altered arrangement of Bob Dylan's "Subterranean Homesick Blues" closes the album. Stanley would release one more solo album before forming the Michael Stanley Band and becoming a superstar in Ohio, but it all began with the uneven yet promising Michael Stanley.
© Bret Adams /TiVo

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