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Sparks of Ancient Light
Sparks of Ancient Light

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Artist: Al Stewart
Label: Appleseed Records
Category: Music

List Price: $17.98
Buy New: $11.82
You Save: $6.16 (34%)



New (36) Used (9) from $9.99

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 16 reviews
Sales Rank: 1066

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 4.9 x 0.4

MPN: 1112
UPC: 611587111227
EAN: 6115871112272
ASIN: B001CW7LPC

Release Date: September 16, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Brand new and factory sealed. Most orders shipped within 24 hours directly from our warehouse.

Tracks:

  • Lord Salisbury
  • (A Child's View of) The Eisenhower Years
  • The Ear of the Night
  • Hanno the Navigator
  • Shah of Shahs
  • Angry Bird
  • The Loneliest Place on the Map
  • Sleepwalking
  • Football Hero
  • Elvis at the Wheel
  • Silver Kettle
  • Like William McKinley

Similar Items:

  • Time the Conqueror
  • Between the Wars
  • Gift Of Screws
  • A Beach Full of Shells
  • Harps & Angels

Editorial Reviews:

Album Description
Magical history tours have been Al Stewart's trademark since the early 1970s, when he switched from writing about his own romantic turmoil to a wider view of the world and its rich cast of characters and events. While his 1976 international hit single, "Year of the Cat," was tied to no specific time, the albums surrounding it combined finely drawn character studies and detailed settings that ranged across continents and centuries, forming the template of history mixed with mystery for Al's subsequent recordings.

Everything changes with time - except basic human motivations. Sparks of Ancient Light, Al's latest collection of songs (following 2005's A Beach Full Of Shells), spans at least 2500 years of history in its tales of exotic locations and situations, all tied to an underlying theme of "certainly and uncertainty." Something's happening in each of these songs, a sense of change and movement beneath the sometimes sedate, sometimes dramatic facades. The larger context isn't always obvious, but the emotions behind the action are always recognizable - love, greed, wanderlust, jealousy, complacency, curiosity, regret, hope.

With winningly varied arrangements mixing folk, rock, classical and jazz, and immaculate production from multiple-Grammy-winning guitarist Laurence Juber (formerly of Paul McCartney's Wings), the CD both starts and ends with songs set in 1896. The opening "Lord Salisbury" examines Great Britain's prime minister flinching from the oncoming events threatening his policy of "splendid isolationism," while the protagonist of the "Like William McKinley" finale awaits the rush of progress with calm resignation. In between those bookends, we are shown "(A Child's View of) The Eisenhower Years," a bouncy evocation of post-World War II optimism; a freaked-out Elvis Presley undergoing a religious revelation as he witnesses Josef Stalin's face morphing into Jesus Christ in a desert cloud formation (true story!) in "Elvis at the Wheel"; an international con man hoodwinking the well-to-do who embrace him as their latest diversion ("Sleepwalking"); and Hanno the Navigator (in the same-named song), sailing from Carthage off the end of the world to indescribable adventures 500 years before the Christian calendar, among others. The song set closest to the present, "Shah of Shahs," finds the Shah of Iran caught in a decline of power in 1979 that eerily resembles today's scenario in the White House.

With Juber and Stewart on guitars, accompanied by gliding, jazzy keyboards, a rhythm section and occasional horns and strings, the mood of each song is well-matched to its accompaniment. Al's erudite lyrics, instantly recognizable Scottish/British drawl, and seductive tunes present him at the top of his art, braiding historical fact and speculative imagination into yet another memorable collection of musical short stories that whisks us up, down and sideways in time and place.



Album Description
Al Stewart's new album is infused with a theme of "certainty and uncertainty." Grammy award winning producer Laurence Juber teamed with Al for the fourth time to produce this album on which Laurence's virtuoso guitar playing and instrumentation again perfectly match Al's peerless trademark songwriting. Each of the dozen tracks is a newly-cut gem that Al has set in its own time and place. There are tales of ancient adventure on the high seas; Elvis behind the wheel; a football hero having an interesting day; a sensuous street corner; the Shah; and a very, very angry bird. SPARKS OF ANCIENT LIGHT - a radiant and stellar collection of songs about love, loss, exploration, revelation, and history.


Customer Reviews:   Read 11 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Another Al Stewart masterpiece   September 18, 2008
 27 out of 28 found this review helpful

This superlative new effort stands as one of Al Stewart's best albums. It continues in the vein of its predecessor A Beach Full of Shells but has a richer, crisper sound, warm and natural and with playing both organic and solid. Having now produced the last four albums, Laurence Juber has developed a keen sense of how to present Al's songs in the best light, and has outdone himself here.

This album contains at least three all-time Stewart classics in "Lord Salisbury," "Shah of Shahs" and "Hanno the Navigator," the latter of which inspired the album's cover art. Like many of Stewart's historical epics, "Lord Salisbury" might send one to an encyclopedia to better understand its title character, but one need know nothing about that Victorian-era prime minister to enjoy Stewart's tune and wordplay and the tremendously effective horn arrangement.

"Shah of Shahs", inspired in part by Ryszard Kapuscinski's book of the same name detailing the downfall of the last Shah of Iran, subtly makes its point that all such figures pursue their own version of the perfect dream.

Throughout the album, as in all of Stewart's best efforts, there are moments both grand and delicate, and pleasures to be found in both extremes. Several of these songs, such as "Angry Bird" (with its imagery of radical penguins leading an errant avian youth astray) will hit you in full immediately, while others such as the sublime "Silver Kettle" will reveal themselves gradually with repeated listenings.

Al Stewart's talents as a lyricist and composer are in full flower, and this collection stands proudly alongside the most celebrated works of his past.






5 out of 5 stars Sparkling   September 18, 2008
 18 out of 19 found this review helpful

More brilliance from Al and Laurence Juber. Another great collection of songs spanning eons of time,with tales of oceans, desserts, football fields and angry birds. (Did you expect anything less?) Unlike the stories of recent albums which focused on life between the wars, wine or the shells of lost opportunities, this one has a running theme of seeing in the light of the moment, when ever that moment may occur: thousands of years ago, the fifties or a lost moment on a football field. Al Stewart remains a preeminent storyteller, history lover and songwriter. He continues on an unmatched roll with stellar album after the next. "Sparks" is beautifully produced with great splashes of gorgeous violin,hammond organ and guitar work throughout. As will all of Al's albums,repeated listenings are a must! For me, "Sparks" ranks up there with the Fleet Foxes as great albums of 2008 and is another delightful addition to the Al Stewart catalog. Yes sir, tis a beauty indeed.


5 out of 5 stars 4 1/2 Stars - So Al   September 16, 2008
 17 out of 18 found this review helpful

I've been a fan of Al Stewart's work for 30 years ever since I bought the album Time Passages after hearing the title track on the radio as a 16 year old. Since then I've picked up every new Al album as soon as I was aware it was out. There is something comforting about getting a new Al Stewart cd. You basically know just what you are getting - intelligent songwriting, great music and Al's timeless distinctive voice - which sounds just as perfect now as it did in the early 70's. Even on some of his weaker albums there are always at least a few tracks that impress. But Sparks Of Ancient Light is not weak in any way. Al has put together a great collection of songs - beautiful, often historical, writing coupled with exquisite musicianship. Laurence Juber's production is the perfect setting for these songs. There are at least a half dozen that have already become personal favorites in the past few days. I would go so far as to say that Sparks Of Ancient Light along with Down In The Cellar (from a few years ago) may be Al's 2 best albums since the late 70's.



5 out of 5 stars Sparks: Light Up Your Life   September 18, 2008
 4 out of 6 found this review helpful

Brilliant. I just can't stop listening to "Sparks". And in these grim days, one can find so much solace in Al's music. My favorites are "The Loneliest Place on the Map", "Silver Kettle" and "Like William Mckinley". But the rest is also as good as it can get. There is something for everyone on this album. I love "Beach Full of Shells" and lyrically it was one of the strongest of Al's albums (as good as the good old days of Modern Times, Year of the Cat and Time Passages). But so many years later, Al again proves he is in his own league. The songs are beautiful and the music even more with incredible guitar work and soothing violins. Great stuff Al: Keep it up (and tour Virginia).


5 out of 5 stars Certainty and Uncertainty   September 19, 2008
 4 out of 4 found this review helpful

Was lucky enough to get an early copy of Sparks of Ancient Light at a concert, and to hear Al tell us all about it. That always adds an extra dimension to his songs for me.

This album, to me, is both simplistically catchy and deeply profound. I found myself singing along to it the first time I played it, but some of the lyrics had kind of an after affect for me, like it was all just a lot of fun until the whole picture formed in my head. But I suppose that's just me.

What I also picked up on is a completely different frame of mind from Beach Full of Shells. On that album, Al seems reminiscent, looking back and looking ahead from the point of view of someone who has a lot to look at.

This album feels lighter and more playful. Even though some of the topics are a bit dark, the songs themselves all have a sense of hope and even the occasional recklessness. There is a definite balance in the imbalance that eventually feels good and right regardless of what actually happened to the song's subjects.

If this sounds a bit heady, it's because it was to me. But now it's feeling more like just a really fun and catchy little album. I just chose my official favorite song: Like William McKinley. :)

I wouldn't recommend this album to new Al Stewart fans. You really need to be a long-time fan to appreciate it. But if you are a true fan, BUY THIS ALBUM NOW! You need to have it!



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