Twin Sons of Different Mothers | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Dan Fogelberg and Tim Weisberg |
Cover: | Dan Fogelberg - Twin Sons of Different Mothers.jpg |
Released: | August 1978[1] |
Recorded: | 1978 |
Genre: | Rock, soft rock, jazz, classical |
Length: | 34:32 |
Label: | Full Moon, Epic |
Producer: | Dan Fogelberg, Tim Weisberg |
Next Title: | No Resemblance Whatsoever |
Next Year: | 1995 |
Twin Sons of Different Mothers is a collaboration album by American singer-songwriter Dan Fogelberg and jazz flutist Tim Weisberg, released in 1978. It was the first of two collaborations between the pair; the second was No Resemblance Whatsoever.
The album peaked at number 8 on the Billboard 200, and at number 7 on the Cashbox Top 100 Albums. The album was a double-platinum seller.[2] The closing track of the album, "The Power of Gold", was released as a single, reaching number 24 on the Billboard Hot 100 and number 51 in Canada.
American music journalist Paul Zollo wrote that after the success of Fogelberg's album Nether Lands, he wanted to make his next album "completely about music, without any commercial aspirations whatsoever". Having previously worked with Weisberg on Nether Lands, Fogelberg invited him to make the album a duet. At the time, they both had long hair and beards, so they decided to title the album Twin Sons Of Different Mothers. The single "The Power of Gold" was added to the album at the last minute, due to the initial track they had planned on, had the piano out of tune with the orchestra, and it would have to be redone. To avoid the cost of that endeavor, Fogelberg quickly penned "Power of Gold", which was instead added to the album. Little did he know, Zollo opines, that the single would become one of the "biggest hits of his career".
Zollo also wrote that Fogelberg wasn't really optimistic about the success of the duo's album, and "expected it to be savagely attacked by the critics", so he flew to Europe with some friends before the album was released. He was astounded when he received an "excited call from his manager Irving Azoff informing him that the album had gone Top 20". Zollo goes on to say that Fogelberg figured "there was no sense in fighting it", so he then returned to the United States, and "went into the studio immediately to work on songs for his next album, Phoenix".[3]
Cash Box Magazine said the album "combines the talents of two performers in an experimental way" and "interestingly blends the folk-rock, guitar flavored elements of Fogelberg's music with Weisberg's more airy, free-spirited, flute laden sound". They pointed to "Tell Me Why To My Face" and "The Power of Gold" as "standouts" on the LP.[4] Madeline Kind of The Jerusalem Post Magazine, was blunt in her assessment of the album, calling it "rather boring".[5]
Author Dave DiMartino from Billboard Books, highlighted the "extraordinary version" of The Hollies "Tell Me to My Face", that "revealed an aspect of Fogelberg's rock roots that hasn't been on display since".[6] In 2003, Blender Magazine rated Twin Sons of Different Mothers as the "worst CD" of Fogelberg's, with Fogelberg additionally being listed number 19 on "The 50 Worst Artists In Music History".[7]
The San Francisco Bay Guardian said the album was "generally satisfying", remarking that Fogelberg "dominated most of the album", and praised the tracks "Hurtwood Alley" and "The Power of Gold" as "especially propelling". They also noted that the album had an "occasional tendency toward musical cliche". They criticized "Guitar Etude No. 3" as sounding like a "warped version of 'Girl From Ipanema'".[8]
American music critic Dave Marsh wrote in The Rolling Stone Record Guide that the album reminded him of "smooth post-rock cocktail-lounge Muzak". He criticized Fogelberg for being "bland", but said Weisberg made up for it in "spades". He also said the "combination ought to be marked as an insomnia cure".[9]
Studios
Chart (1978) | Position | |
---|---|---|
Australia (Kent Music Report)[10] | 81 | |
Cashbox Top 100 Albums[11] | 7 |