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Залит Shawn_Phillips/(1970)_Second_Contribution
Шон Филлипс (не аутать с Тони Филлипсом из Генезиса) - американский фолок/прог-рок гитарист и певец, названный "самым неизвестным из известных". Он играл и пел с самыми выдающимися рок-исполнителями, записал более 30 альбомов, но до сих пор не приобрёл заслуженной славы.
Это его второй сольный альбом.
Сначала мне не очень понравилось, на первой вещи голос какой-то неприятный, но потом, по мере развития, голос именился, и при том же характере музыки стал более, скажем, соответствующим ей. Невзирая на большой колличество треков, на самом дели они объединены в три большие фолк/рок/симфо-рок-композиции, а также 3 отдельных небольших песни.
Всё очень неплохо, можно смело слушать вечерком в полумраке.
Ах, да! Название первой вещи ИМХО одно из самых длинных в рок-музыке.
She Was Waitin' For Her Mother At The Station In Torino And You Know I Love You Baby But It's Getting Too Heavy To Laugh
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Shawn Phillips biography
Shawn Phillips (born February 3, 1943) is an American folk-rock musician, primarily influential in the 1960s and 1970s.
Phillips has recorded twenty six albums and worked with musicians including Donovan, Paul Buckmaster, J. Peter Robinson, Eric Clapton, Steve Winwood, Bernie Taupin, Tim Hardin, Manos Hatzidakis and many others. The Texas-born singer-songwriter was described as "the best kept secret in the music business" by the late rock impresario Bill Graham.
Phillips was born in Fort Worth, Texas. He is believed to have lived with Donovan in England in the 1960s and appeared as a session musician on several of the singer-songwriter's albums, including Fairytale, Sunshine Superman, and Mellow Yellow. Phillips claims to have contributed backing vocals to "Lovely Rita" by The Beatles. He was cast to play the lead in the original production of Jesus Christ Superstar, but had to withdraw due to his heavy recording and touring schedule. In February 1969 Phillips wrote and performed, with The Djinn, the music for the controversial Jane Arden play Vagina Rex and the Gas Oven at the Arts Laboratory on Drury Lane.
Phillips worked the folk music scene in Los Angeles, San Francisco, New York City's Greenwich Village, and London. In 1967, Phillips moved to Positano, where he remained throughout the 1970s, recording the albums Contribution, Second Contribution, Collaboration, and Faces.
Four of his albums (Faces, Bright White, Furthermore, and Do You Wonder) charted in the Billboard 200 between 1972 and 1974. In addition, the singles "Lost Horizon" and "We" appeared on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in 1973 (numbers 63 and 92, respectively).
His album No Category, featuring his longtime collaborators Paul Buckmaster and Peter Robinson, was released in 2002.
In 2007, his first live album, Living Contribution, was released, along with a Live DVD of the same title.
After living near Port Elizabeth, South Africa for fifteen years with his South African wife Juliette, since 2016 Phillips has resided in Louisville, Kentucky with Juliette and their son Liam. He is still a dedicated artist to his craft, dividing his time between writing, recording, touring, and his work as an emergency medical technician (EMT) and firefighter.
In an interview with Chicago music critic Scott Itter, Phillips was reminded that he had once been described as "the best kept secret in the music business" by the late rock impresario Bill Graham. Asked why he was still "a secret" to many people, Phillips replied:
I'm not that interested in the fame, and popularity, but I would like to have the money that comes with it. I suppose the two have to go hand in hand. My "secrecy", is simply because none of the companies I have ever been affiliated with have cared enough to hire a national PR firm on an annual basis as part of the machine that creates the fame and popularity. Also, if you use a word like xenophobia in a song, or any word that the general public has to look up, they tend to shy away from any semblance of intelligence in popular music.
(c)wikipedia
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(c) Shawn Phillips biography, PA
(c) Written by Lorenzo Galbiati (JamesBaldwin) with assistance from Ken Levine (kenethlevine)
Status as of June 2019: active
Shawn Phillips (born in 1943 in Fort Worth, Texas), the son of famous novelist Philip Atlee, who moved with his family around the world, is one of most idiosyncratic and unconventional musicians of the 1970s. He learned to play guitar at age seven and as his family traveled from continent to continent, reaching the Pacific Islands (Tahiti), he absorbed all kinds of music that reached his ears.
Phillips became a virtuoso 12-string guitarist and a virtuoso vocalist, with his three-octave vocal range which allowed him to range from baritone to counter-tenor, and a composer of a deliberately unclassifiable music ("No Category" is the title of his album released in 2003), which mixes folk, rock, blues, jazz, funk, classical, ethnic traditions and, later, electronic music.
In the early 1960s he played in the folk circuit in California, and published his first record, a single of Bob Gibson's version of "Frankie and Johnnie". His first two albums, "I'm A Loner" (1965) and "Shawn" (1966), included covers of folk songs by Travis Edmonson, Phil Ochs, Hamilton Camp, and Pete Seeger; musical standards and pop music ("It Was A Very Good Year", "My Favourite Things", "Maria"); and some original pieces. Phillips established himself as a troubadour in line with the folksingers of the Sixties with his arrangements limited to vocals and 12-string guitar, though his vocal and guitar styles already offered glimpses of an unusual rhythmic and harmonic vivacity. The public and critics alike ignored these early releases.
In the mid 1960s Phillips went to England, where he learned to play sitar, and performed with DONOVAN on his albums "Fairytale", "Sunshine Superman", "Mellow Yellow". While he was given a sole co-songwriting credit for ""Little Tin Soldier", Phillips claims that he also co-wrote "Season of the Witch" and many other songs on "Sunshine Superman". He has also claimed to have contributed backing vocals on "Lovely Rita" on "Sgt. Pepper's" by THE BEATLES. In 1967, Phillips moved to Italy and settled in Positano, a beautiful fishing village, where he remained throughout the 1970s.
In 1968, he went to London where he began recording songs with "Traffic" members Steve Winwood, Chris Wood, and Jim Capaldi. His project was a trilogy of albums but no major label was interested. Only two years later the recorded material would be published for A&M records in the album that can be considered his real debut as a singer-songwriter: "Contribution" (1970).
In that LP Phillips initiated his association with orchestral collaborator Paul Buckmaster, who would prove pivotal in the development of his music. Phillips mixed folk-rock ("Man Hole Covered Wagon"), indian raga ("Withered Roses"), classical guitar sonata ("L Ballade"), jazz and psychedelia, forging an extremely original work that received positive reviews both musically and lyrically.
Starting with the next album "Second Contribution" (1970), possibly Phillips' masterpiece, Buckmaster became even more involved, which offered a jazz-fusion and funky twist to Phillips' irregular folk-blues. The songs were often mixed and developed according to an abstract free-form that straddled jazz-rock and symphonic prog. The structure was akin to a mini-suite composed of several movements. "The Ballad Of Casey Deiss" (in memory of a beloved friend) is perhaps considered his classic par excellenc, with an acoustic folk melody and, in the end, a transition to a more progressive-style atmosphere, with vibraphone and horns trading off variations on the theme.
During his first U.S. tour, late in 1971, he was discovered by the public and the critics. He was one of the few singer/songwriters to play double-necked six- and 12-string guitars (a standard feature of progressive and metal bands) on-stage. In 1971 he released the third volume of his trilogy, "Collaboration", another wonderful opera.
Along with Buckmaster, Phillips surrounded himself with musicians engaged in progressive bands such as bassist John Gustafson (Quatermass, Roxy Music), keyboardist Peter Robinson (Quatermass), Poli Palmer and Jim Cregan (Family). On tour, Phillips usually played solo, or accompanied by Peter Robinson on keyboards.
"Faces" (1972), a collection of unreleased tracks from 1969, featured Steve Winwood, and a long jam "Parisien Plight II". With "Bright White" (1973), Phillips embarked on the third phase of his discography, more conditioned by Buckmaster and Robinson's influence. The sound became more electric and well- structured, enhanced by mighty orchestral arrangements, and with the help of mellotron, "Furthermore" (1974) sidled up closer to symphonic progressive than its predecessors, and might be the best album of this phase. The next one "Do You Wonder" (1975) was more pop-oriented and maybe somewhat less inspired.
With "Rumplestiltskin's Resolve" (1976) Phillips returned to his ambitious experiments, in particular the ten-minute "Today" and the seven-minute title track. "Spaced" (1977) collected unpublished material published by A&M without the artist's authorization, but does include the 16-minute suite "I Don't Want To Leave You".
For "Transcendence" (1978), he mixed his guitars with a 60-piece symphony orchestra and members of Herbie Hancock's band.
It was his unclassifiable run of ten 1970s LPs for A&M that established his reputation for experimentation, original creativity and virtuosity, without ever achieving the stardom that his talent seemed to merit. His experiments with electronic keyboards on his LPs in the late 1970s made him a jazz-funk pioneer, and so it was not a surprise that in 1980, Shawn Phillips joined Richard Bugg and Cal Grant for the Cosmic Debris project, which led to the progressive electronic album "3.7 K", where he played guitar and synth guitar. Phillips did not participate in the second album of the band.
From the eighties he slowly disappeared from the scene, and became even more enigmatic.
In 1983, he recorded "Beyond Here Be Dragons", another ambitious set with bassist Alphonso Johnson, guitarist Caleb Quaye, keyboardist J. Peter Robinson, and Ralph Humphrey on drums. It was released five years later, in 1988.
In 1994 a brand-new studio album, "The Truth If It Kills", produced by Michel Le Francois was issued only for the Canadian market.
Phillips lived in Italy most of the 1980s and 1990s, but became a firefighter and an emergency medical technician in Texas, then moved to post-Apartheid South Africa and worked as a paramedic with the National Sea Rescue Institute.
Between 1994 and 2003 Phillips was off the musical grid, until he published "No Category" (2003) on Universal, featuring his longtime collaborators Paul Buckmaster and Peter Robinson. The LP includes new pieces alongside previously issued songs. A box-set with "Contribution" and "Second Contribution" was released in 2004 and his catalog titles slowly began reappearing from various labels.
In 2007, his first live album, "Living Contribution: Both Sides", was released, along with a Live DVD of the same title. In 2009, Hux released another live album: "At the BBC", taken from a 1973 appearance.
The double-disc "Perspective" (2013), contains twenty songs recorded since the 2000s in South Africa. In 2014 Phillips produced "Infinity", a pop-rock album of unreleased material from 1989.
After living near Port Elizabeth, South Africa for fifteen years with his South African wife Juliette, since 2016 Phillips has resided in Louisville, Kentucky with Juliette and their son Liam. He is still a dedicated artist who divides his time between writing, recording, performing music and his work as an emergency medical technician and firefighter.
"Continuance" (2017) is his latest album.
Shawn Phillips remains an enigmatic and unclassified character on the music landscape. Phillips never courted an obvious commercial sound, preferring to write songs that defied categorization, that "make you feel different from the way you felt before you started listening", as he declared, and he thus managed to avoid pigeonholing. His prog related credentials rest in his ability to write songs that stretch the canons of every musical genre, that range from folk to classical, from funky to electronic, from symphonic pop to jazz, and in arrangements that both were inspired by and inspired the prog rock of their day. The participation in his sessions of other performers of the progressive scene, as well as the participation of Shawn Phillips in the Cosmic Debris' first album, are but a few of the additional reasons why we believe we can include this great and unknown artist in the prog-related category.
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Enjoy!
WBR, Michael Baryshnikov.
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