Tuesday, July 03, 2007

John Stewart "Punch The Big Guy" {USA}[1987](Country/Folk-Rock)

John Stewart :
AKA Keeper Of The Flame.


John Stewart possibly had 2 moments of fame 1 when the Monkees recorded his Daydream Believer and 2 with the song Gold which had F Mac's Lindsey Buckingham as backup singer.

However, I think John has a deep vein of excellent music surrounding him and this is one of my favourites of his.

Please visit the Amazon page for this and 'at least' listen to "Botswanna" and "Strange Rivers" before passing this one by - The Amazon page is here =

http://tinyurl.com/2qlvyp

Tracks:
01. Angels With Guns
02. Strange Rivers
03. Hunters Of The Sun
04. Price Of The Fire
05. Midnight Of The World
06. Night Of A Distant Star
07. Botswanna
08. Ticket To The Stars
09. Runaway Train
10. Children Of The New Frontier

Review:
If there was justice in the music world, Punch the Big Guy would have been a huge commercial success. John Stewart took his songwriting prowess to its zenith, brought in a stellar cast of musical compatriots, and put together his finest three-quarters of an hour.

His lyrics here are fired with anger, righteous indignation, political awareness, compassion, and, ultimately, love. The arrangements, built around Stewart's fingerpicked electric guitar, are mesmerizing, and his muscular baritone provides the perfect delivery van for sharing these observations, memories, questions, and vows.

One cannot come away from this music unaffected.

On "Midnight of the World," Stewart asks, "Will you always be my girl?" while simultaneously pondering the last days of the world. "Runaway Train" later became a number one country hit for Rosanne Cash, who contributes eerie vocal harmonies to "Price of the Fire" and "Angels With Guns."

Throughout, however, Stewart expresses the sense of faith and hope outlined in "Ticket to the Stars": "There are forces to guide you/spirits beside you/Rivers to ride you home to the stars." John Stewart achieves a genuine merger of the personal, the spiritual, and the political on Punch the Big Guy and wraps it all up in a darkly colored but accessible package.

The mix of ballads and upbeat rockers holds the attention of even a casual listener, but for those who invest a little of themselves in the depth of its songs, this album offers a chest full of rare musical treasure. - Jim Newsom, All Music Guide

2 comments:

ZaXXoN said...

http://tinyurl.com/2rnvnx

Anonymous said...

Dear All,
from the Kingston Trio era, i follow the serious and competent musical work of John Stewart, but the record ZaXXoN posted is impossible to take, the address:
http://tinyurl.com/2rnvnx
it seems to be wrong, so please could you repost it?
thanks again and all the best!
thegreek (italy)

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