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John
Howard
British Singer-songwriter
Studio Albums
Kid
in a Big World
Technicolour
Biography
Can
You Hear Me Okay
The
Dangerous Hours
The
Pros and Cons of Passion
Same
Bed Different Dreams As
I Was Saying Barefoot
With Angels
Navigate
Home
Live
Albums
In
the Room Upstairs
More
From the Room Upstairs
Best
Of and Compilations
Sketching
the Landscape 1973-1979
Creating
Impressions - singles and rarities 1980-1990
These
Fifty Years - The Best Of
EPs
My
Beautiful Days
Walk
on the Wild Side
The
Bewley Brothers
Back
to Record Review Index
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to Home Page
Titles
in red have been reviewed. Those in black are to be reviewed
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John
Howard click
here for interviews with John Howard - Updated April 1st, 2009 John
has an official web which can be accessed by clicking
here. John
also has his own section on My Space which you can visit by clicking
here. One
of the great attractions of music is coming across new artists and delving
into their back catalogue. Which
brings me to the strange "success" story of British
singer-songwriter John Howard. A few years ago on the strength of a review
and a couple of tracks on compilation CDs from a national music magazine,
I bought Howard's Kid in a Big World CD. This
album was not so much a sleeper as a comatose delight. Originally it was
issued in 1975 but slumbered away for many years probably in the vaults of
remainder bins at relatively unknown LP shops in back streets. Kid in a
Big World became known as one of the "great forgotten albums of the
1970s". It obtained something of a cult status. Then
magically the album re-surfaced in CD format 28 years later and the record
world was able to hear once again just what it had been missing for almost
three decades. RPM
Records re-released Kid and you might say "the rest is history,"
but thankfully it isn't. John started writing again, shelved albums were
released and John started touring. The great thing is that listening to
John Howard doesn't feel as if you are in a time warp. It does make you
feel that you are in the presence of one of this country's great
songwriting talents - think early Elton John mixed with a bit of Billy
Joel and a smattering of Clifford T Ward and Ray Davies style observations
and you might be somewhere close. Oh I forgot a bit of glam Bowie as well.
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Kid in a Big
World - 7.5
There is a definite
touch of the first Elton John album about Kid in a Big World. It
is so difficult to see how and why this album was ignored for so
long. It's poignant but at the same time fun and has an
originality often missing from the genre. Lyrically John Howard
was very strong even for the early mid 70s which to me have always
been the quintessential period for British music. It is conceivable that
John was overlooked due to the variety of styles which defied
pigeon-holing.
The opening track "Goodbye Suzie" is
evocative both in lyrics and voice and some of the songs are
almost heart-wrenchingly sad in a strangely uplifting way. Kid in a Big World
should have been the start of a glittering career and now almost
30 years after its original release it could be. The re-issued CD
includes seven tracks not on the original album.
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Technicolour
Biography
This was originally
intended as a follow-up to Kid but was never completed. But again
it slept in the vaults and RPM records released it in 2004 - some
30 years after it was recorded.
A review will follow
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Can You Hear Me
Okay - 7
Another album shelved
by CBS and released by RPM in May 2005. Can You Hear Me is a big
departure from Kid - less idiosyncratic but undoubtedly an album
written from the heart which is the great thing with John Howard.
He personalises the songs. The lyrics are never trite and here the
backgrounds have a more middle of the road feel to them. Certainly
it's not as immediate as Kid but John took a different direction
by calling in Biddu to produce. Biddu is probably best known for
the Carl Douglas hit Kung Fu Fighting. This is a million miles
from that offering, however.
In some ways it is
easy to see why CBS shelved the project. John Howard must have
been seen as being many miles from a commercial proposition back
in the 1970s. He is much too cultured for that and at the time
will have suffered from the craft that has gone into these songs.
They aren't immediate. You have to stick with them, but ultimately
there's the same lush vocals, the same songwriting skills and a
slightly different direction to enjoy which includes a cod
falsetto disco song "I Can Breath Again."
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The Dangerous
Hours
Bringing us more up to
date, John collaborated with Manchester poet Robert Cochrane in
this 2005 release. |
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Same Bed,
Different Dreams - 7
Completed in early
2006 and released in March 2007 as the artist's catalogue
continued to grow. One of John Howard's great inspirations is the
past. So on the opening track "My Girl By the
Temptations" we hark back to the glorious days of soul with
mentions for John Lennnon and Shirley Temple to name but two.
"Oh Midnight" is a beautifully complex song that is a
real grower. Similarly "Sacred Heart" has an epic feel
about it both from the musical and lyrical point of view. "Laura
Coming Home" is another of those songs that hits the spot in
so many ways with its mention of milk and honey mornings
(beautiful imagery as always. Same Bed, Different Dreams once
again shows John Howard to be a genuine poet as well as artist. Another
outstanding track is Punchin' Judy the story of domestic violence
with the heart-rending lines "Something happened to the man I
loved, he became a monster, where did I go wrong -"
wonderfully evocative lyrics.
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As I Was Saying -
8.5
John's first new
singer-songwriter album for 30 years and released on Cherry Red
Records in 2005. And what an exceptionally good album this one is.
From the opening words of the opening song "Taking It All To
Heart" we know we are in familiar territory: "On
reflection is a great place to be" and so it is. The
remarkable thing about this is it was recorded 30 years after Kid
In a Big World, but it just follows on perfectly from that album -
a seamless transition over three decades. John's voice sounds as
fresh as it always has. It's just as though cryogenics have been
used and the artist's body has been frozen Adam Adamant* like to
re-appear 30 years later.
The Dilemma of of the Homosapien rips
along, there's plenty of glitz and glitter throughout the album as
if it is a hark back to the golden 70s and there's name checks for
Simon Cowell and Mama Cass and many others. To return after so
long with such an accomplished album is something of a triumph.
These Fifty Years is one of my favourite Howard songs and the
album ends with the wonderfully poignant The Time of Day - one of
his best songs where his voice has a Phil Ochs feel to it and his
piano playing is just simply beautiful.
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In the Room
Upstairs - 7
Heaven's Promise/Echoes of a Better
Time/A Willing Deception/Old Light, Cold Light/They/Nothing is
Forever Anymore/Blue Lady/Maybe Someday in Miami/ The First to Go/
Such a Drag/This Savage Mercy/The Deal/These Fifty Years/My
Beautiful Days/Kid in a Big World.
This live album was recorded over two nights at Manchester's Briton's Protection in May and June
2006. It is a mix of songs written especially for the occasion and
mixed with some tried and trusted tracks such as the excellent
"Kid in a Big World" and "These Fifty Years."
The album is exclusively available on I Tunes. It is a very
intimate collection of songs where John allows the audience into
his life for what must have been a highly enjoyable evening. Once
again much of the material on this album grows on you the more it
is played.
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More From the
Room Upstairs -
Goodbye Suzie/Finally Adored/And
Even Now/Ballad of Marlowe B West/The Promise/Family Man/Last
Stand/More to Life Than This/Blue Days/The Builder From
Heaven/Dear Glitterheart
The second part of the live album
recorded in Manchester and released on I Tunes. A review will
follow:
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Barefoot With
Angels - 7.5
Released in 2008 after being
recorded in John's home studio. Released on Spanish record label
Hanky Panky it marked the artist's move from the UK to southern
Spain. Once again I can thoroughly recommend this album. The more
you immerse yourself in John Howard's music the more subtle and
beautiful you realise it is. This is slightly lower key but just
as effective as "As I Was Saying."
There is some
wonderfully romantic music here. The opening track The Exquisites
takes us on yet another journey into the past - familiar territory
with mentions for the Beatles, glam rock, Brian Ferry, David Bowie
and Top of the Pops. The stand-out track is "Barefoot with
Angels" with its early Elton John feel and epic proportions.
Together this album and As I was Saying acts as perfect foils. If
the former is slightly more upbeat, the latter takes us through a
lush panorama of vignettes and subtle melodies.
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Navigate Home - 8
Lion in My Winter/ All This Time
(What Took You So Long)/ Navigate Home/ Portrait of a Mother/ Calm
(My Fury Blind)/ Notes to Self/ A Wardrobe Dreams/ In Whose House/
Isn't That The Truth/ Change (Who Changed?)/ Miss Ashton's
Disappointment/ The Leaving (Prayer)/ Precious (Alone is Hard to
Do).
In his cover notes to Navigate
Home, John Howard states that songs just started pouring out,
which is in itself extremely interesting. By the time they reach
their 50s most artists are settling down to pipe and slipper
music. The angry young men have turned into peaceful middle age.
Then you have the likes of John Howard whose output is increasing
both in quantity and quality. Perhaps it was the years in the
wilderness, almost hiding his talents, perhaps unsure of his
ability. Thankfully that talent is now on show for all to enjoy.
John's voice never slips. It is just a tragedy that his music
doesn't find a larger audience - or perhaps that is its
attraction. You see to like John's music simply illustrates that
there are hidden gems out there. All you have to do is scratch
beneath the surface. Navigate Home is glorious. For me whatever
the stresses of the day have been, simply listening to a John
Howard album sooths the furrowed brow and makes you feel human
again. Navigate Home is simply an extension of everything he has
done in the past - beautiful melodies, lush orchestration, deep
lyrics about love and life.
John cares about his music. He
cares about what we think of it. It's wonderful to find an artist
who lets us into his world as much as this. I know John won't mind
if I quote from his notes as they say much more than I ever could
"I wanted the album to reflect
a sense of travel, of seeking out and finding, of upheaval and
settlement, of loss and renewal, of reflection and anticipation
where the past had brought us and what the future held"
In other words a man at the
crossroads of life - setting off in a different direction with
more than a nod to some of the great songwriters of our
generation. There are mentions for such influences as Laura
Nyro, Carl Wilson and Jimmy Webb (more of this later). Of course
John doesn't just imagine and write about the upheaval - he has
lived it as well.
John Howard lets us into his life
in a welter of subtle colours. The album opens with one of his
most beautiful songs "Lion in My Winter" which starts
the journey. "Portrait of a Mother" is a clever song
following a visit to a David Hockney portrait exhibition in
London. The whole journey idea is no better shown than in Notes to
Self which is designed to sound like a train rushing along and
reminded me greatly of the W H Auden poem The Night Train.
Of course there is always a touch
of glam with John Howard and here it comes in the form of one of
his longest songs. "A Wardrobe Dreams" weighs in at well
over 10 minutes and ends with some wonderfully evocative and
tuneful piano work. It's certainly more glam rock than Lion, Witch
and Wardrobe.
Change (Who Changed?) is John's
homage to the genius of Jimmy Webb. To me Webb remains the
greatest living songwriter, so the inclusion of a track inspired
by By the Time I Get to Phoenix is highly appropriate. I
particularly like "Miss Ashton's Disappointment." For a
start it's a story song and it also lets us into another corner of
John's life - his days learning the piano and the breakdown of the
relationship with his teacher the day he put lyrics to Fur Elise.
It wasn't a popular move but it taught the young John that what he
really wanted to be was a singer-songwriter. And I have to say
that in this song John mentions Richard Harris and MacArthur Park.
There's also mentions for Brian Wilson and I swear a touch of
Jacques Brel in this one - need I say more. The album ends with
another romantic number Precious (Alone is Hard to Do) written for
two friends who were getting married. I can think of no more
appropriate song to tie the knot to.
I have only mentioned some of the
songs on the album. The others are just as vital in their own way
in a feelgood induced journey through the singers, past, present
and future. Dramatic, lush, luxurious - this is music for grown up
people.
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These Fifty Years
- The Best of John Howard - 7
Goodbye Suzie/ Kid in
a Big World/ Can You Hear Me OK/ Dear Glitterheart/ These Fifty
Years/ Success/ Barefoot With Angels/ This Strange Mercy/ Ballad
of Marlowe B West/ The Bewley Brothers/ Walk on the Wild Side/ My
Beautiful Days/ Be Not So Fearful/ Stay/ Blue Days/ Neil (You Can
Depend on Me)/ Misty/ Good in Time Very
often the job of a best of collection is to show the different
sides of an artist. In other words you simply can't have an album
full of up tempo numbers or ballads (unless of course you refer to
this in the title). So does John Howard show us his many sides?
Well yes he does. Here we have some of the early material such as
a beautiful lush version of Kid in a Big World, put alongside the
glam of "Dear Glitterheart" and the later material
like Neil (You Can Depend on Me) and the excellent "Barefoot
with Angels" And thrown in are a number of covers including
the classic Misty and two on the surface unusual choices in
Bowie's The Bewley Brothers and Lou Reed's classic Walk on the
Wild Side. Thankfully John makes no attempt to emulate Reed's
style but puts his own harmonious slant on Walk - whether you
enjoy this take on a classic track is a matter of personal taste.
Overall it's a good introduction to John's music with plenty of
variety and a collection thoughtfully put together. |
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*
- Adam Adamant was a British television programme that ran from 1966 to
1967 and featured Gerald Harper as an Edwardian adventurer brought back to
life in England of 1966.
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