Road Songs for Lovers explained

Road Songs for Lovers
Type:Album
Artist:Chris Rea
Cover:Road Songs for Lovers.jpg
Released:29 September 2017
Studio:Metropolis Studios
Recorded:2017
Length:58:20
Label:Jazzee Blue & BMG
Producer:Chris Rea
Prev Title:The Journey 1978-2009
Prev Year:2011
Next Title:One Fine Day
Next Year:2019

Road Songs for Lovers is the twenty-fourth studio album by British singer-songwriter Chris Rea, released on 29 September 2017 by Jazzee Blue and BMG labels.[1]

Background

Rea stated there was no initial intention to make a new album, but after a bad medical condition in 2016 he started to write new songs which eventually led to a band regroup, and first album release in six years.[2] A semi-concept album,[3] the songs were inspired by traveling on the road to London, seeing couples in cars and questioning the "people's love stories inside cars".[4] According to Rea, most of the songs are about a boy-girl relationship in the car. He has stated that his favorite song is "Last Train", the lyrics of which are not about the typical meaning of the last train which goes home, but taking the last train in a desperate situation without knowing anything about its direction.[2]

Release

The album was released on a double gatefold vinyl LP, and CD edition featuring 12-page booklet. Prior to the album release the song "The Road Ahead" was released on 29 July 2017 as a single for digital download and streaming.[5]

Tour

The album release was followed by a European tour with 37 dates which started in October until December, 2017.[6] During the tour he had to have daily three hours long therapy for nerves in his right hand.[7] On 9 December, Rea collapsed during a performance at the New Theatre Oxford, the 35th concert of the tour.[8] He was taken to hospital, with his condition stabilised,[9] and the last two concerts canceled.[10]

Reception

Doug Collette, in a review for All About Jazz, gave the album 4/5 stars, concluding that "the sonics of this album, as applied to the tantalizing guitar solo of 'Last Train' and throughout the album, are a reassuring blend of succor and salve for body, mind and soul".[11] Aaron Badgley for The Spill Magazine also gave it 4/5 rating, praising the album for its blend of blues and rock, stating that "young artists would do well to study this one, it really could be a blueprint for how a good rock album should sound".[12]

Andrew W. Griffin rated it 4.5/5, considered "Last Train" to be "delivered in gothic, world-weary style that brings to mind Bob Dylan or Tom Waits or Nick Cave" and praised the engineers, Alex Robinson and Tim Young, mastering.[13] Hugh Fielder writing for Louder Sound commented, "As the title suggests, Rea is on familiar ground once again, but his fans won’t be complaining. After all, the scenery on any road trip is an endless vista of observations and speculations, and Rea’s lyrics can evoke both with consummate ease, drawing you closer as the album progresses. The musical class on this record is, of course, a given."

Hugh Fielder from TeamRock gave it 3.5/5 stars and stated that "fans won't be complaining. After all, the scenery on any road trip is an endless vista of observations and speculations, and Rea's lyrics can evoke both with consummate ease, drawing you closer as the album progresses".[14] Giuliano Benassi for laut.de gave a score of 3/5 and concluded it gives "easy listening for intense concert evenings" and that Rea "still does not lack musical ideas".[15]

Personnel

Production

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Road Songs for Lovers. AllMusic. 12 December 2017.
  2. Chris Rea. 16 August 2017. Chris Rea-Road Songs For Lovers (Interview). 12 December 2017. YouTube.
  3. News: Yates . Henry . 3 October 2017 . How Chris Rea became rock's ultimate survivor . . 22 December 2020.
  4. News: Dave Robson. Chris Rea on having a stroke, touring, his new album - and racing an old police car. 30 August 2017. Gazette Live. 12 December 2017.
  5. Web site: Chris Rea announces September 29th release of new BMG album 'Road Songs For Lovers’!. 19 August 2017. FrontView Magazine. 12 December 2017.
  6. News: Dave Robson. Chris Rea reveals tour dates as he goes back on the road again. 24 April 2017. Gazette Live. 10 December 2017.
  7. News: Graeme Thomson. Chris Rea: 'I hate hotels rooms. They remind me of hospitals and I’ve had enough of them'. 18 November 2017. The Herald. 16 December 2017.
  8. News: Lin Jenkins. Chris Rea 'stable' after on-stage collapse at Oxford theatre. 9 December 2017. The Guardian. 10 December 2017.
  9. News: Nicola Harley. Chris Rea, Driving Home For Christmas star, 'stable' after 'falling into a clump' on stage. 10 December 2017. The Daily Telegraph. 10 December 2017.
  10. News: Laura Harding. Chris Rea cancels another show after collapsing on stage. 11 December 2017. The Independent. 13 December 2017.
  11. News: Doug Collette. Chris Rea: Road Songs For Lovers Review. 30 September 2017. All About Jazz. 12 December 2017.
  12. News: Aaron Badgley. Spill Album Review: Chris Rea - Road Songs For Lovers. The Spill Magazine. 12 December 2017.
  13. News: Andrew W. Griffin. Chris Rea returns with sublime "Road Songs For Lovers". 7 December 2017. Red Dirt Report. 15 December 2017.
  14. News: Hugh Fielder. Chris Rea - Road Songs For Lovers album review. 6 September 2017. TeamRock. 12 December 2017.
  15. News: Giuliano Benassi. Zurück zum Easy Listening vergangener Tage.. 29 September 2017. laut.de. LAUT AG. German. 13 December 2017.
  16. Web site: Chris Rea - Road Songs for Lovers. Discogs. 12 December 2017.