Beat Avenue

Beat Avenue Artist: Eric Andersen
Label: Appleseed Records
Category: Music



Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
Media: Audio CD
Number Of Discs: 2


UPC: 611587106827
EAN: 0611587106827
ASIN: B000087DRW


Release Date: 2003-02-25

Related Categories:

Contemporary Blues Contemporary Blues
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Tracks:

  1. Ain't No Tme To Bleed
  2. Before Everyting Changed
  3. Salt On Your Skin
  4. Song Of You And Me
  5. Shape Of A Broken Heart
  6. Great Pyramid
  7. Under The Shadows
  8. Rains Are Gonna Come
  9. Runaway
  10. Stupid Love
  11. Still Looking For You
  12. Feel Like Comin' Home

Tracks:

  1. Beat Avenue
  2. Blue Rockin' Chair

Similar Items:

  1. Blue River
  2. The Street Was Always There
  3. Memory of the Future
  4. You Can't Relive The Past
  5. Waves

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars One of the Year's Best.......2003-09-16

"Stranded in the wilderness, high inside my hand, for every act of wickedness, another grain of sand," Eric sings on the opener "Ain't No Time to Bleed" with Phoebe Snow's vocals soaring behind Eric's burning lyrics. When Eric sings "Jesus pawned his cross," it's evident we're in a for a bumpy ride as Eric dedicates this to Bob Dylan who he describes as, "true poet, hard worker, man of constant wonder, good friend, teacher, the master." If Dylan's the master, Andersen's an apt pupil as he changes gears for the midtempo "Before Everything Changed." Eric hits his softer side on "Shape of a Broken Heart," with Joyce Andersen's aching violin giving the bare-bones melody a dream-like quality. Eric rocks again on the haunting "Great Pyramid," "I'm looking for the holy man banished on the cross; I'm looking for the eyes of God, I'm looking for the loss." On "Rains Are Gonna Come" Eric again rocks full throttle. Garth Hudson's piano pounds on the rocker "Stupid Love." Lucy Kaplansky does background vocals on the soft lovely melody "Still Looking for You." "It's time to let the river just flow" Eric sings seeking peace on "Feel Like Comin' Home." On the second disc, the 26 minute "Beat Avenue" is a homage to the beat poets referencing memories of John Kennedy's assassination. Eric's voice talk-sings like a sober Tom Waits alienated and apart from a world that seems out of control. Eric concludes with a slow blues groove and snarls through the 10-minute "Blue Rockin' Chair," "Trying to be a beggar but you don't know how."

Eric Andersen is incredible in so many ways. He is first and foremost an artist striving for quality. His lyrics are some of the most intricate and literate; so it's a shame that they are not printed here. [My apology in advance if I've incorrectly heard the lyrics I quoted.] Eric is also incredible because he is a survivor with a 40-year career in which he is still expanding horizons. Seek & you shall find!

5 out of 5 stars continuing greatness.......2003-03-04

Eric Andersen has been putting out wonderful records for almost 40 years now. From his earliest work he has always been one of the giants of the singer songwriter field, and yet somehow his stature has never received the achnowledgement it has so clearly merited. Has the New York Times devoted an extensive review to any of his albums over the last 15 years (since "Ghosts Upon the Road)? I don't think so. And yet Andersen's work over that time has been among his strongest ever...remarkable work quite simply beyond the reach of anyone other than Dylan. Dylan, of course, has had a great 90's too, but he has also gotten plenty of recognition for it. Will this superb record change that? Probably not, but it should. Musically and lyrically it is a triumph for Andersen. The music is full of energy and variety. The band plays wonderfully behind him. And the lyrics...one song after the next...are astonishingly rich. Beat Avenue is a master at the very top of his game. It is inconceivable to me that a record better than this will come out this year.

5 out of 5 stars Career Defining at the Age of 60.......2003-02-27

Eric Andersen is one of those vanguard pioneers who came out of the Northern snowfields in the 60's and set about blurring the lines as to what songwriting was supposed to be about. As original and creative as his comtemporaries, some of whom inspired him, some of whom he challenged, much as fellow Canadian Neil Young would a few years later, Andersen seemed to trawl the darker waters of the soul, without falling under the sweep of the tide. Nothing's changed. It's only improved with age.
His career hit a watershed moment with "Blue River", and as the "Lost Tapes" confirmed, he was very much the musical counterpoint to Thomas Pynchon's "Gravity's Rainbow." The BIG buisness of recording eventually ignored him, so he took himself back to the woodshed of his origins and began a long, fruitful and philosophically intense sojourn in Norway. All of the CDs from this epoch in his life are worth seeking out, in particular his collaborations with Jonas Fjeld, and later with Rick Danko.
But even with all of these extraordinary achievements, I have to admit I was completely blown away by the power of this CD. As the official reviewer states, this somewhat harkens back to a time when radio was less market researched and would give you a shot at stringing together something bold, creative, innovative. Andersen was all that in spades all along. It has reached its zenith here.
The opening disc, supported by a superb cadre of musicians and singers, including his daughter, has all the trademarks of Eric Andersen at the top of his game. The second disc is a meditation on what went wrong with the world when America slew its leader. As McLeese notes, this is the kind of epic that perhaps only Robbie Robertson or Dylan could pull off with the same cogency, drama, power. It's not like you suddenly become brain dead at 60, but when you consider how safe most people try to play their lives by that point, to summon the courage and integrity to push songwriting and philosophical beliefs at this point in his life is positively Heideggerian in its daunting bravery. Plus it's sheer genius. Andersen went right to the cliff and lept off. His flight into the heavens is a thing of wonder, and he has a lot of very important observations to make that we ought to listen to, if we're not going to kill ourselves off for sure. Essentially, his is a soul that wants to come home. He has sought that home in lovers, family, music, Norway, North America. He looks for it still and will not release his soul or his heart or his mind until he finds it. Quite a statement from an artist who has always made quite a statement. Get this. You owe it to yourself.

Music CD:

  1. Sweet & Lowdown ~ Dave van Ronk
  2. Acoustic Jazz Guitar ~ Artie Traum
  3. The Brendan Voyage ~ Shaun Davey
  4. Very Best of ~ Kenneth Mckellar
  5. Live in Tasmania ~ John Fahey
  6. Out of the Dark ~ Claudia Schmidt
  7. The Road from Connemara ~ Joe Heaney
  8. Silly Sisters ~ Maddy Prior & June Tabor
  9. Heyday: BBC Radio Sessions, 1968-1969 ~ Fairport Convention
  10. Coming of Age ~ Jude Johnstone

Music CD

Music CD

Music CD

Sin and Other Salvations ~ The Wyrd Sisters

Back & Forth ~ Ann Reed

Cold Steel for an Iron Age ~ Destroyer 666

Wherever I May Roam ~ Metallica

Quantum Dreaming ~ Lil Cyco

Sunny-Side Up/Dear My Friends/Fly Away ~ Shela

Flenks ~ Flenks

Menopause ~ Soft Ballet

Tu la Conosci Claudia ~ Original Soundtrack

Loaded ~ Various Artists