Label: Nemperor Records (US), ZK 35538
Style: Folk, Americana, Pop Rock
Country: Meridian, Mississippi, U.S. (December 13, 1954)
Time: 37:28
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 223 Mb
American
singer/songwriter Steve Forbert rose to popularity in 1979 thanks to
his breakout hit "Romeo's Tune," a tuneful slice of Americana-driven
rock with a memorable piano melody and a poetic sense of introspection
that became one of his hallmarks. When his next two albums failed to
make as big a commercial impact, he left New York and set up shop in
Nashville, mounting a comeback with 1988's Streets of This Town, which
he followed with a string of albums throughout the '90s. His 2002
tribute to Jimmie Rodgers, Any Old Time, earned a Grammy nomination, and
Keith Urban's 2007 cover of "Romeo's Tune" helped revive interest in
Forbert's biggest hit. Heading into the 2010s, he continued to release
quality folk-rock albums, offering a pair of late-career highlights in
2012's Over with You and 2018's The Magic Tree. He remained consistently
prolific heading into the next decade, first with a covers album,
followed by the winsome Moving Through America in 2022.
Forbert was
born in Meridian, Mississippi, in 1954. After learning guitar at age 11,
he spent his high school years playing in a variety of local bands
before quitting his job as a truck driver and moving to New York City at
the age of 21. There, he performed for spare change in Grand Central
Station and worked his way up to the Manhattan club circuit. After
signing to CBS imprint Nemperor, Forbert debuted in 1978 with Alive on
Arrival, which earned critical acclaim for its taut, poetic lyrics. The
follow-up, 1979's Jackrabbit Slim, was his most successful outing,
reaching the Top 20 on the strength of the hit single "Romeo's Tune."
Earning comparisons to Bruce Springsteen and Bob Dylan, Forbert recorded
two more albums for Nemperor in 1980's Little Stevie Orbit and a 1982
self-titled effort, which in spite of their quality, failed to produce
another hit along the lines of his breakout.
After parting with
Nemperor and New York, Forbert spent much of the decade in Nashville,
where he continued honing his songwriting skills and performed regularly
throughout the South. In 1988, he signed to Geffen, where the E Street
Band's Garry Tallent produced his comeback album, Streets of This Town.
Pete Anderson took over the production reins for 1992's The American in
Me, but Forbert's continued lack of chart success prompted the label to
cut him loose. A deal with the Warner Bros.-affiliated Giant label
resulted in two more studio albums, 1995's Mission of the Crossroad
Palms and 1996's Rocking Horse Head, but in 1998 Forbert moved into
independent territory for the rollicking live set Here's Your Pizza. He
signed with Koch Records for his next studio LP, 2000's Evergreen Boy,
where he also released 2002's Any Old Time, a tribute to country music
legend and fellow Mississippian Jimmie Rodgers, which earned him a
Grammy nomination. Another album of his own material, Just Like There's
Nothin' to It, appeared in 2004.
During this period, Forbert also
released two compilations of rare and unreleased material -- Young,
Guitar Days and More Young, Guitar Days -- as well as several live
recordings. On Stage at World Cafe Live appeared in 2007 from Decca
Vision as well as a new studio set, Strange Names and New Sensations,
from 429 Records that same year. The Place and the Time arrived in 2009.
The Chris Goldsmith-produced Over with You, a sparse song cycle that
showed Forbert's fine songwriting skills, appeared in 2012. Compromised,
a thoughtful and easygoing set including contributions from Joey
Spampinato of NRBQ, songwriter and trumpeter Kami Lyle, and veteran
producer John Simon, arrived in 2015, while 2017 saw the release of
Flying at Night, his 17th studio long-player.
Coinciding with the
publication of his 2018 memoir, Big City Cat: My Life in Folk-Rock,
Forbert released his next album, The Magic Tree. A winsome set of songs
cobbled out of several previously recorded acoustic demos, the record
benefitted from a loose, free-flowing charm that paired well with the
reflective tone of his memoir. 2020's covers set Early Morning Rain also
saw Forbert looking back, albeit through the lens of songs he's loved
throughout his life, putting his stamp on classics by Leonard Cohen,
Gordon Lightfoot, Elton John, and others. 2022's Moving Through America
played like an earthy, wayfaring road album with highlights like the
playful "Fried Oysters."
(allmusic.com/artist/steve-forbert-mn0000752673)
01. Goin' Down To Laurel (05:00)
02. Steve Forbert's Midsummer Night's Toast (02:48)
03. Thinkin' (03:27)
04. What Kinda Guy? (02:35)
05. It Isn't Gonna Be That Way (04:56)
06. Big City Cat (02:51)
07. Grand Central Station, March 18, 1977 (04:14)
08. Tonight I Feel So Far Away From Home (03:13)
09. Settle Down (03:47)
10. You Cannot Win If You Do Not Play (04:32)
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