zondag 9 april 2023

Published zondag, april 09, 2023 by Ad-Vinylrecords with 0 comment

Sniff ´n´ the Tears - Ride Blue Divide (1982) (LP) - €10,00

posted by ad-vinylrecords


Always a class act, this proved to be their last outing for Chiswick Records in 1982. The self-produced album turned up some of Paul Roberts best songs, including their last stab at the charts, "Hungry Eyes". 
Maybe a little understated for Top Of The Pops in '82, nonetheless this material stands the test of time, in a way that many of its contemporaries do not. 
From the sophisticated packaging, featuring another of lead singer Paul Robert's stunning paintings, through to the fine playing of some of London's most seasoned musicians and the excellent songwriting, this album is quality from top to bottom.

Paul Roberts (the singer and main writer for Sniff'n' the Tears) writes some songs with nice solid stories to them, and then him and the band put some very good instrumental work around those lyrics. The music is kinda laid back, which (in my opinion) fits the material. Paul's voice comes through clearly, but music is not some simple guitar strumming in the background.

The first song on the album is (IMO) the weakest. It's also probably the only song that has any connection at all to the cover art (the cover art is actually a painting that Paul had done, and the record company in Germany thought it was a really cool painting so they wanted it for the cover). The original US release of this on vinyl had a much more reasonable picture on the cover, with a guy trying to cozy up to his date at a fancy restaurant. Not as eye-catching as this cover, but it was a much better match for the songs on the record!


The album has several excellent songs, with "What Can Daddy Do" (about a rich father and the life of a daughter that he spoils a bit too much), "If I Knew Then", "5 & Zero" (a gambler in action, gambling at love while gambling for money), "Poison Pen Mail" (a relationship which has gone painfully sour), and "Rodeo Drive" (lifestyles of the rich and conspicuous, as well as those who fall by the wayside).

There are some great lyrics in these songs. Paul can write lyrics which can sound so real-to-life that it's like listening into a conversation. 
You can check out the lyrics at the web site for the group, but you won't quite get the feel of them until you hear him singing the words.

The music has something of a country-rock feel to it (like Eagles or maybe Dire Straits), with a bit more emphasis on having a rock-edge to the music than country story-telling. 
The music includes some well-done keyboard work as well as the standard guitar and drums. But the songs are not dominated by keyboards the way that some groups did back then, and which sounds so out-of-date now. The keyboards and the guitars are playing off each other, and they do a very good job at it.


Side A
A1.  The Hand Of Fate – 4:36
A2.  Hungry Eyes – 3:30
A3.  Company Man – 5:15
A4.  Roll The Weight Away – 3:40
A5.  Like Widfire – 3:19

Side B
B1.  Trouble Is My Business – 4:48
B2.  You May Find Your Heart – 5:13
B3.  Gold – 4:33
B4.  Ride Blue Divide – 5:04


Companies, etc.
Credits

Notes
Release : 1982
Format: LP
Genre:  Pop, Rock
Label:  Chiswick Records
Catalog#  0067.081

Vinyl:  Goed
Cover:  Goed

Prijs: €10,00

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