Stage Left Explained

Stage Left
Type:Album
Artist:Martin Barre
Cover:MartinBarre_StageLeft.jpg
Released:4 August 2003
Studio:Presshouse Studio, Devon, England.
Genre:Instrumental Rock, Progressive Rock
Length:51:06
Label:RandM Records (UK) & Fuel 2000 (United States)
Producer:Martin Barre, Mark Tucker
Prev Title:The Meeting
Prev Year:1996
Next Title:Away with Words
Next Year:2013

Stage Left is Martin Barre's studio album, released in 2003. The title is a reference to his hallowed position on the Jethro Tull stage assignment. It was the first album of Martin Barre to be released both in U.K and in the United States. Stage Left was supported with a tour in small venues.

Musical style

Featuring 13 instrumental tracks (and one with vocals, "Don't Say a Word"), Barre moves through a wide range of guitar-based styles including (but not limited to) classical and blues acoustics, progressive rock, acoustic folk, 80s-styled finger picking and even ambient electronic styles.[1]

Martin stated that the album was conceived with most attention to the melodies, thinking always in the balance between acoustic and electric pieces. The album shows a great variety of guitars and other string instruments, as the bouzouki and the mandolin.[2]

Critical reception

The AllMusic review, by William Ruhlmann, was positive. Giving three stars, the review goes to praise Martin taste for melodies instead of simple guitar solos, also stating Martin's "highly textured approach, playing electric rock guitar much of the time as if he was playing English folk music on an acoustic."[3]

Personnel

Musicians

Additional personnel

Release history

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Martin Barre .
  2. http://www.vintagerock.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=65&Itemid=4
  3. Web site: Stage Left - Martin Barre | Songs, Reviews, Credits | AllMusic . .