Search - Arthur Alexander :: Lonely Just Like Me: The Final Chapter

Lonely Just Like Me: The Final Chapter
Arthur Alexander
Lonely Just Like Me: The Final Chapter
Genres: Country, Pop, Rap & Hip-Hop, R&B
 
  •  Track Listings (21) - Disc #1

Fifteen years ago, Arthur Alexander finally made the album that would give him the acclaim he was denied for decades, in spite of being a crucial influence on the two biggest rock groups of all time. — His comeback album, L...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Arthur Alexander
Title: Lonely Just Like Me: The Final Chapter
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Alternative Distribution Alliance
Original Release Date: 1/1/2007
Re-Release Date: 10/9/2007
Genres: Country, Pop, Rap & Hip-Hop, R&B
Styles: Southern Rap, Pop Rap, Soul
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 081227997052

Synopsis

Product Description
Fifteen years ago, Arthur Alexander finally made the album that would give him the acclaim he was denied for decades, in spite of being a crucial influence on the two biggest rock groups of all time.

His comeback album, Lonely Just Like Me, was as warm and wounded as a fresh heartbreak, lovingly produced by Ben Vaughn and recorded down South with the musicians who backed Arthur s hits in the 60s and 70s. Upon its release, Arthur was shown all the love an artist could hope for. Entertainment Tonight filmed a full segment. Rolling Stone declared the album stunning in a feature review. NPR s "Fresh Air" broadcast a live-in-studio concert (included in the upcoming disc) and, in an unprecedented move, brought Arthur back two weeks later for a full sit-down interview.

But just as every Arthur Alexander song seemed to end in heartbreak, so did his return to the spotlight. Within days of the album s release, Arthur passed away. In the wake of his death this wonderful album faded into little more than a bittersweet memory shared by everyone he touched.

Now HackTone Records will finally give this album the audience it deserves. Lonely Just Like Me:The Final Chapter tells the full story of Arthur Alexander s triumphant re-emergence. Surrounding the original Elektra/Nonesuch album are never-before-heard demos made in a tiny Cleveland hotel room, Arthur s entire live session for NPR s Fresh Air and even a song from the 1991 Bottom Line concert which landed Arthur his new record deal. Produced with the full participation of everyone involved with the original Elektra/Nonesuch album, this is a loving tribute to a legend s final triumph.

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CD Reviews

Brilliant 1993 country soul comeback masterpiece w/bonus tra
hyperbolium | Earth, USA | 10/09/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)

"By the time Arthur Alexander cut this comeback release in 1993 he'd been out of the limelight for nearly 15 years. Thirty years earlier he'd authored songs that stoked the imaginations of The Beatles ("Anna"), Rolling Stones ("You Better Move On") and others. Better yet, his southern soul recording of the latter was the first song ever waxed at the legendary Muscle Shoals studio. His seminal early sides were followed by terrific outings for Monument and Warner Brothers throughout the '60s and '70s, but he never garnered the commercial rewards his artistry deserved. By the end of the '70s, feeling unrewarded and ripped off by the publishers and record labels, Alexander retired from music industry to work with disadvantaged children.



Ironically, it was the same music industry, in the form of A&R executive Danny Kahn, that coaxed Alexander back into the studio. Having spied a rare Alexander performance at New York's Bottom Line in 1992 (represented here by a live take of "Anna"), Kahn signed him to the Nonesuch label and dispatched artist Ben Vaughn to produce an album in Nashville. Stars have rarely aligned so well for a comeback effort. Alexander's new songs were as striking as the originals he re-recorded, and his voice, lightly deepened and weathered by age was even more soulful than thirty years earlier. Original accompanists (plus a few younger players) provided brilliant backings for every track, and Vaughn's production removed the original '60s gloss to focus squarely on Alexander's voice and songs.



Vaughn wrote, "If heartbreak had a sound, it was this voice," and Alexander's final LP drove home the point. The early single "Sally Sue Brown" was reworked as an acoustic blues that loaded its signature guitar lick up front. The teary mid-70s "Every Day I Have to Cry Some" was given a bittersweet southern soul treatment of moody horns and a strong backbeat, with Alexander defiant and defeated at the same time. "If It's Really Got to be This Way" is stalwart in the face of loss, "Genie in the Jug" salves romantic pain, and the gospel-styled "All the Time" laments a mortally wounded heart. The album's few lighter notes are the closing "There is a Road," and the faithful "I Believe in Miracles."



Originally released in 1993, the album was well received, and Alexander found himself in demand for interviews and performances. Hacktone's reissue augments the original dozen tracks with four live performances from NPR's "Fresh Air," together with interview segments that find Alexander gracious, happy to be performing, and seemingly at peace with the poor treatment he'd received the first time around. Four recordings captured by Ben Vaughn on a cassette recorder in a hotel room (including a cover of Neil Diamond's "Solitary Man") show Alexander compelling in just about any circumstance.



Sadly, just as Alexander's revival was gaining momentum he was felled by a heart attack only three months after the album's release, passing away days after a concert in Nashville. This musical epitaph deftly tells the final chapter of Alexander's career, from the artistic success of his comeback to the critical and commercial recognition that followed. This is an essential for all those who love southern soul and want to spend some quality time with the sound of heartbreak. [©2007 hyperbolium dot com]"
The whole package
Sam I Am | 11/05/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)

"In some respects, this album can be considered a "reissue" - but really, it's more than that. It's the stark, simply beauty of Alexander's voice in the hotel room demos included here; the matter-of-fact 'Fresh Air' interview segments where Alexander discusses (with no bitterness) how the record business basically screwed him years and years ago; the heartening way he sings "Anna" at the Bottom Line.



The people who put this album - nay, this PACKAGE - together are true fans of Alexander's and you can feel it whether you're leafing through the scrapbook pages from his life (included in a nook behind the cover art) or whether you're marveling at how haunting Alexander's voice sounds after so many years.



It's easy to see why high-profile musicians (Rolling Stones, Beatles, Dylan, etc.) have always covered Alexander's music - he had a simple gift for songcraft and an honest heart that came through in his music."
Wonderful. A great voice, great interview.
Bill Staley | Santa Monica, CA USA | 01/06/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Anna and Really Got to be This Way are my favorites. The studio recordings are worth many listenings. The Fresh Air interview is wonderful. He seems like such a nice guy -- in the interviews and as a singer, writer and in his choice of songs by others. The Fresh Air songs are great. The hotel demos are interesting to hear once. I also bought Greatest Hits, which I also recommend. These simple, direct songs stand up well to the test of time. John Lennon and Mick Jagger did not surpass him in their covers."