Tea for the Tillerman
- List Price:
$37.98
- Buy New: $29.81
-
as of 5/26/2012 08:32 EDT details
- You Save: $8.17 (22%)
- Seller:-importcds
- Sales Rank:36,643
- Format:Hybrid SACD - DSD
- Language:English (Unknown)
- Media:Audio CD
- Discs:1
- Shipping Weight (lbs):0.2
- Dimensions (in):5.6 x 5 x 0.5
- Release Date:December 13, 2011
- UPC:753088913563
- EAN:0753088913563
- ASIN:B005VEQR0W
Availability:Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Tracks
- Where Do the Children Play?
- Hard Headed Woman
- Wild World
- Sad Lisa
- Miles From Nowhere
- But I Might Die Tonight
- Longer Boats
- Into White
- On The Road To Find Out
- Father And Son
- Tea For The Tillerman
Editorial Reviews:
Synopsis
Tea For The Tillerman is one of Cat Stevens' finest albums and a gem in the crown of early 1970s singer/songwriterdom. Stevens manages to have his cake and eat it too, simultaneously achieving pop accessibility and artistic relevance. The feel is decidedly gentle and spare. Apart from the occasional string section, Stevens is accompanied only by a three-piece band as he sings his introspective lyrics with appreciable favor.
Amazon.com
Cat Stevens tends to be lumped in with the early-'70s singer-songwriter school led by James Taylor and Carole King, but he actually fits in rather neatly with such wistful English contemporaries as Nick Drake, Syd Barrett, and Donovan. Tea for the Tillerman's "Wild World," "Into White," and "Longer Boats" indicate that he may have been a more gifted tunesmith than the lot of them. As with the best of the Brit folk-rockers, Stevens mixed melancholy with whimsy. Yes, he was prone to airy platitudes, but when he harnessed his eccentricities, as he did throughout this 1970 masterwork, you had something truly distinctive. Stevens's greatest drawback was that he was a natural cult artist, à la Tim Buckley and Leonard Cohen. But that's a tough role to play when you're selling 25 million records, as Stevens did before he changed his name to Yusef Islam, established an Islamic school, and raised a ruckus by supporting Ayatollah Khomeini's death decree against author Salman Rushdie. But that's another story. --Steven Stolder
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