March 23, 2015

Published March 23, 2015 by ad-vinylrecords with 0 comment

Ellen Foley - Spirit Of St. Louis (1981)














Artist:  Ellen Foley
Title:  Spirit Of St. Louis
Release:  1981
Format:  LP
Label:  Epic Records
Catalog#  EPC 84809

Spirit of St. Louis is the second studio album by American singer and actress Ellen Foley, released in 1981. Foley is backed by The Clash on all songs. The album was recorded right after The Clash’s Sandinista! with the same musicians and engineers.
Ellen Foley evidently yearned to do something with more gristle than the rockist sturm und drang of her solo debut, “Night Out”. She got her wish, although titles like “The Death of the Psychoanalyst of Salvador Dali” surely puzzled fans who heard her breathless guest vocal on “Paradise by the Dashboard Light.” Ironically, the press focused more on the assistance rendered by Foley’s steady, Clash guitarist Mick Jones (whose production is credited to “my boyfriend”). His other Clash-mates also appear, as do members of Ian Dury’s backing band, the Blockheads; this impressive array of talent gives the album a unity it might otherwise lack. Jones and fellow Clash-mate Joe Strummer co-wrote six songs. The standout is “Torchlight,” a duet with Foley on which Jones drops some characteristically glistening guitar. “The Shuttered Palace” and “Theatre of Cruelty” also work well, logically upholding the Sandinista! era’s dense, intricate wordplay. The other Strummer/Jones efforts are less distinctive. “Salvador Dali” is little more than an impenetrable grocery list of free associations, “In the Killing Hour” is a sketchy throwaway that needed a stronger arrangement, and “M.P.H.”‘s bumptious pub rock is fun listening, but hardly a classic. Strummer’s old busking mate, Tymon Dogg, contributes three killer tunes himself: his affectionate “Beautiful Waste of Time” is the best one, bolstered by an inspired Payne sax line. (The song originally appeared on Dogg’s 1976’s self-released Outlaw Number One album.) Foley is less convincing on a stiff remake of “My Legionnaire,” but fares better on her own propulsive original, “Phases of Travel.” The sound is lush and dreamy, although a little more consistent material and less artsiness would have gone a long way.


Side one
1.  The Shuttered Palace  (5:06)
2.  Torchlight  (3:00)
3.  Beautiful Waste Of Time  (3:00)
4.  The Death Of The Psychoanalyst Of Salvador Dali  (2:42)
5.  M.P.H.  (3:30)
6.  My Legionnaire  (4:32)

Side two
1.  Theatre Of Cruelty  (4:04)
2.  How Glad I Am  (3:35)
3.  Phases Of Travel  (4:13)
4.  Game Of Man  (3:55)
5.  Indrestructible  (3:47)
6.  In The Killig Hour  (2:39)

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