Brother (Cry of Love album) explained
Brother is the debut album by the American rock band Cry of Love, released in 1993.[1] [2]
"Peace Pipe" peaked at No. 1 on Billboards Album Rock Tracks chart; two other singles made the chart's top twenty.[3] "Bad Thing" peaked at No. 60 on the UK Singles Chart.[4] The album sold more than 200,000 copies.
Cry of Love supported Brother by opening for Robert Plant, Aerosmith, and ZZ Top on separate North American tours.[5] [6] [7]
Production
The album was produced by John Custer at Muscle Shoals Sound Studio, and was recorded and mixed in four weeks.[8] [9] [10] The majority of the album's songs were written by Cry of Love's guitar player, Audley Freed.[11] "Peace Pipe" is about the United States breaking its treaties with Native Americans.[12]
Critical reception
The Washington Post called the album "the usual post-Allmans compendium of blues-rock swagger, soul-man vocals and bad-love and on-the-road songs."[13] The Morning Call wrote that the songs "have a raw, naked sound built around the tough, direct playing of guitarist Audley Freed, bassist Robert Kearns and drummer Jason Peterson, plus [Kelly] Holland's soulfully sandpapered singing."[14] The Boston Herald praised the "distinct and agreeable '60s and '70s blues-rock vibe."[15]
The Journal Star determined that "the straight-ahead rock, with a blues undercurrent, brings to mind basement jam sessions or a carful of friends singing to a blaring stereo."[11] The Los Angeles Daily News labeled it "unadorned, sparsely produced Stratocaster-driven rock."[5] The Modesto Bee concluded that Brother "contains straight-ahead rock that's raw and unfiltered, catching a sound that's since been urbanized and called 'grunge.'"[16] The Fort Worth Star-Telegram considered the band "awfully derivative—sometimes annoyingly so," writing that "Bad Thing" "is nothing more than Grand Funk's 'Some Kind of Wonderful' with a little Bad Co. mixed in."[17]
AllMusic deemed the album "a near-perfect fusion of classic British hard-rock influences (read Free) and Southern rock sensibility, bringing a refreshing honesty to the dreary radio landscape of the early '90s."
Track listing
All tracks written by Audley Freed, except where noted.
- "Highway Jones" (Freed, K. Holland)
- "Pretty As You Please"
- "Bad Thing" (Holland, Freed, J. Custer)
- "Too Cold in the Winter" (Holland, Freed)
- "Hand Me Down"
- "Gotta Love Me" (Freed, Holland, Custer)
- "Carnival"
- "Drive It Home" (Freed, Holland, Custer)
- "Peace Pipe" (Freed, Holland)
- "Saving Grace"
Personnel
From Columbia's CK 53404 CD liner notes
- Audley Freed - guitars
- Kelly Holland - vocals, percussion, piano on "Carnival"
- Robert Kearns - bass
- Jason Patterson - drums
- John Custer - piano on "Bad Thing"
- Pepper Keenan - tremelo guitar on "Bad Thing"
- Kelly, Jason, Robert, Audley, Josh, John, Kent - hand claps on "Bad Thing"
Notes and References
- Web site: Cry of Love Biography, Songs, & Albums. AllMusic.
- Web site: Step It Up and Go: The Story of North Carolina Popular Music, from Blind Boy Fuller and Doc Watson to Nina Simone and Superchunk. David. Menconi. September 22, 2020. UNC Press Books. Google Books.
- Web site: Joel Whitburn Presents Rock Tracks 1981-2008. Joel. Whitburn. January 15, 2008. Hal Leonard Corporation. Google Books.
- Web site: CRY OF LOVE | full Official Chart History | Official Charts Company. www.officialcharts.com.
- News: Shuster . Fred . CRYING OUT FOR ACCEPTANCE - BAND ACHIEVES RECOGNITION AFTER INCREASING WORD-OF-MOUTH . Los Angeles Daily News . October 12, 1993 . L8.
- News: Menconi . David . A FAR CRY - If the road to success has a fast lane, it's not in sight on the extended rock tour . The News & Observer . March 20, 1994 . G1.
- News: Hill . Jack W. . 'WHAT YOU SEE IS WHAT YOU GET' AS CRY OF LOVE TAKES STAGE . Arkansas Democrat-Gazette . April 29, 1994 . 4 . 4.
- News: Menconi . David . CAREER MOVES . The News & Observer . February 12, 1993 . W4.
- News: Sculley . Alan . CRY OF LOVE: THEY MAKE THE '70S SOUND NEW . St. Louis Post-Dispatch . 29 Apr 1994 . 4H.
- News: Green . Tony . Cry of Love brings its "Peace Pipe' to town . St. Petersburg Times . August 6, 1993 . Weekend . 19.
- News: Timm . Lori . RETRO-ROCK GROUP OWES FAME TO A FRIEND . Journal Star . March 10, 1994 . C4.
- News: Morse . Steve . Cry of Love builds future hits from an R & B past . The Boston Globe . 7 Jan 1994 . ARTS & FILM . 81.
- News: Jenkins . Mark . The Sincere Cry Of an Allmans Love . The Washington Post . 13 Aug 1993 . N16.
- News: Harry . Rich . NORTH CAROLINA'S CRY OF LOVE TREATS VINTAGE BLUES ROCK LIKE A BROTHER . The Morning Call . August 21, 1993 . A57.
- News: Johnson . Dean . Band's got Love for '60s sound: Group members live for guitar-rock of the past . Boston Herald . January 10, 1994 . A&l . 27.
- News: Coats . Rusty . ROCKERS CRY OF LOVE, LITA FORD HAVE AREA DATES TONIGHT . The Modesto Bee . October 8, 1993 . H6.
- News: Ferman . Dave . Retread boogie . Fort Worth Star-Telegram . April 22, 1994 . STAR TIME . 23.