Sonntag, 17. März 2024

Cass Elliot – The Road Is No Place For A Lady (1972)

"The Road Is No Place for a Lady" is the fifth and final studio album released by Cass Elliot. It was the second album she recorded after signing with RCA Records. The album was recorded over a period of two months during the summer of 1972 at London's Trident Studios, produced by Lewis Merenstein and arranged and conducted by Larry Fallon and Del Newman.

"There was a reason the Mamas & the Papas were such a popular band, racking up ten Top 40 hits in two and a half years, "The Road Is No Place For a Lady" is evidence of just how important Mama Cass was to the hit mix. This album is an exquisite high, from the opening piano of the Albert Hammond classic that almost made it twice -- "(If You're Gonna) Break Another Heart" to the slick adult pop of Webb's "Saturday Suit." With legendary session guitarist Cris Spedding providing little touches of wah-wah on "Walk Beside Me" to Elton John percussion guy Ray Cooper adding his magic, this album is a work of art. Just play it next to David Cassidy's failed The Higher They Climb to feel the difference. Cass exudes real power from within, and the superb arrangements by Larry Fallon and Del Newman are what give Lewis Merenstein's production real depth. 

This is Elliot going deeper into her Judy Garland phase. Great album cover by photographer Ave Pildas has Elliot's living room spread out on railroad tracks, an owl in a glass case reflected in the mirror, Elliot's only company for afternoon tea. The final track on side one, "All My Life" contains all the loneliness depicted on the front and back cover photos. 

The tragedy of this album is that "(If You're Gonna) Break Another Heart" didn't destroy the charts upon release. It is total pop sophistication, Mama Cass' voice soaring over the strings, piano, and backing that is a Phil Spector hit without the wall of sound. Really brilliant pop to be studied and cherished. Her solo hits coming in 1969, this 1972 recording is the singer just two years before her passing. Say Hello has real pop magic that Bette Midler fully understood on her 1972 debut. This album is almost like the passing of the torch. "Who in the World is exquisite, a real departure from the rest of the album; beautiful Larry Fallon strings help Elliot convey the sentiment. Fallon hit with "Brandy" by Looking Glass that same year, and Rolling Stones producer Jimmy Miller had Fallon add strings to an unreleased version of "Wild Horses." 

That so many talents in their prime help Mama Cass deliver on each song, the sweeping chorus of "Love Was Not a Word," the tremendous early version of Pink Floyd producer Hurricane Smith's "Oh Babe, What Would You Say" who would hit with it just a few months later, to the title track, emphasizes what a musical time the early '70s were, and how respected Mama Cass was in musical circles. An uplifting album by an underrated star."
(allmusic.com)


Tracklist:

(If You're Gonna) Break Another Heart 2:20
Saturday Suit 2:55
Does Anybody Love You 2:50
Walk Beside Me 2:55
All My Life 2:41
Say Hello 3:09
Who In The World 2:40
Love Was Not A Word 2:57
Oh Babe, What Would You Say 3:03
The Road Is No Place For A Lady 3:09

(320 kbps, cover art included)

5 Kommentare:

Anonym hat gesagt…

Thank you, sir Zero!
Bless...

Liana Helas hat gesagt…

Music is my religion. [Lionel Hampton] - https://lianahelas.blogspot.com/2023/01/z-z-xxxix-daily-sirens-1972-2022.html

copacetic47 hat gesagt…

Thank you very much.

D hat gesagt…

thanks for this rare one

zero hat gesagt…

Thanks for your comments - you´re all welcome!

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