Harmony Row
Harmony Row is the third studio album by Scottish musician Jack Bruce, released in July 1971. The album takes its title from a tenement street in Glasgow, near where Bruce grew up.[1] The street, since demolished, was famous as the largest unbroken houserow in Europe, stretching for over a mile.[2] The album's cover photo was taken near the Harmony Row tenement[1] in Govan. Although since cited by Bruce as his favourite solo album,[3] Harmony Row did not chart upon its release. The album would be his last solo effort for over three years, as Bruce would join the power trio West, Bruce and Laing (with whom he would record three albums) in early 1972. The song "The Consul at Sunset", which was inspired by the Malcolm Lowry novel Under the Volcano, was released as a single in 1971 (Polydor 2058–153, b/w "A Letter of Thanks"). Background and recordingThe vocals, guitars, and drums for each track were all recorded together, "live" style.[4] The guitarist, Chris Spedding, later described the atmosphere of the sessions: "[Drummer] John Marshall said to me one day, in the beginning of our work day, 'I wonder what Jack's got for us today,' you know, some of it was quite challenging stuff. 'I hope we do it all right. I hope we don't make too many mistakes.' In a good way. You know, tension, and hoping that you get it all right. And of course, once we started playing, it was so intense, the concentration - I don't even know if I could do such a thing today. We were in our twenties then."[4] Reception
On its release, Tony Palmer wrote in the London Observer:
Track listingAll lyrics composed by Pete Brown and music composed by Jack Bruce, unless otherwise noted.
2003 CD bonus tracks
Personnel
NotesReferences
External links |
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