Rockalia sitio de música rock, albunes, canciones, info, fotos y videos

Rock and roll music

Todas las bandas, solistas, guitarristas y músicos del rock.

1973 studio album by Procol Harum

Grand Hotel is the sixth studio album by Procol Harum. Released in 1973, it signalled a change of direction for the band. Guitarist Dave Ball, who had joined the band for their live album the previous year, left shortly after the photo shoot for the proposed album`s cover, to be replaced by Mick Grabham. Grabham`s head was superimposed on the front and back cover of the album on Ball`s body. Although the band had gone through significant personnel changes in previous years, the band would enter its most stable phase with this lineup.

Leer más

Grand Hotel

Procol Harum

1973 Estudio
  • Fecha Lanzamiento: Marzo 1973 · Fecha Grabación: 1973 -
    Discográfica: Chrysalis,Esoteric Recordings (2021 remaster),Repertoire (2000 German reissue) · Estudio de grabación: AIR (London, UK)[1] · Productor: Chris Thomas
    1
    Grand Hotel
    Procol HarumProcol Harum • 1973
    6:11
  • 2
    Toujours l'amour
    Procol HarumProcol Harum • 1973
    3:34
  • 3
    A Rum Tale
    Procol HarumProcol Harum • 1973
    3:24
  • 4
    T.V. Caesar
    Procol HarumProcol Harum • 1973
    5:52
  • 5
    A Souvenir of London
    Procol HarumProcol Harum • 1973
    3:23
  • 6
    Bringing Home the Bacon
    Procol HarumProcol Harum • 1973
    4:23
  • 7
    For Liquorice John
    Procol HarumProcol Harum • 1973
    4:04
  • 8
    Fires (Which Burnt Brightly)
    Procol HarumProcol Harum • 1973
    5:33
  • 9
    Robert's Box
    Procol HarumProcol Harum • 1973
    4:43
  • Singles


    No se encontraron resultados

    Review

    1973 studio album by Procol Harum

    Grand Hotel is the sixth studio album by Procol Harum. Released in 1973, it signalled a change of direction for the band. Guitarist Dave Ball, who had joined the band for their live album the previous year, left shortly after the photo shoot for the proposed album`s cover, to be replaced by Mick Grabham. Grabham`s head was superimposed on the front and back cover of the album on Ball`s body. Although the band had gone through significant personnel changes in previous years, the band would enter its most stable phase with this lineup.

    Leer más

    The album reached No. 21 on the Billboard album charts. It peaked at #4 in Denmark,[2] where the group was always well received.

    Although Grand Hotel appears on the surface to be a concept album, the "concept", according to lyricist Keith Reid, doesn`t extend beyond the title tune.[3]

    The single "A Souvenir of London" was banned by the BBC for the reference to venereal disease in its lyrics. Reid claimed that the song was really inspired (regardless of how it turned out and was interpreted) by a visit to a souvenir shop near George Martin`s AIR Studios where the album was recorded. "Almost every album has had at least one comic song...and this one was a bit tongue in cheek" Reid stated as part of an interview for the 2009 CD reissue.[4]

    Critical reception

    Professional ratings
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    Christgau`s Record GuideC[5]

    Reviewing for Rolling Stone in 1973, Bud Scoppa called Grand Hotel a "confused and uneven transitional album" and "a collection of overblown production jobs that, at their worst, approach self-parody, and simpler, less grandiose tracks that suggest Procol Harum may yet find a way out of the corner they have worked themselves into."[6] Village Voice critic Robert Christgau similarly noted the split in musical identity: "For years, these guys have vacillated between a menu of grits that certainly ain`t groceries and larks` tongues in aspic. Despite their current white-tie conceit, they still haven`t decided."[7]

    In a retrospective review, AllMusic`s James A. Gardner gave the album three-and-a-half out of five stars and said the replacement of the band`s original guitarist Robin Trower with the "capable, even powerful, but not nearly as distinctive" Mick Grabham resulted in a greater reliance on "ornate arrangements than guitar riffs, making this somewhat more dignified than either of their previous studio albums, Home and Broken Barricades."[8]

    2009 Salvo reissue

    In 2009 Salvo reissued the CD remastered by Nick Robbins. Vocalist/keyboardist/composer Gary Brooker and lyricist Keith Reid supplemented the original CD with two bonus tracks. Both were "raw" tracks; i.e., they did not feature overdubs. One of the bonus tracks, "Bringing Home the Bacon", is the only one to feature former guitarist Dave Ball. The 2009 reissue also featured an essay by Patrick Humphries and was reissued in a cardboard sleeve.

    Record Store Day UK 2021 release

    A newly remastered limited edition vinyl LP of Grand Hotel was released on Record Store Day UK, 12 June 2021 on the Esoteric Recordings label. This release was limited to 1000 copies in 180g white vinyl. Newly remastered from the original master tapes and cut at Abbey Road Studios, it has a gatefold sleeve and facsimile of the original lyric book.[9]

    Track listing

    All tracks are written by Gary Brooker and Keith Reid

    Side one
    No.TitleLength
    1."Grand Hotel"6:08
    2."Toujours L`amour"3:32
    3."A Rum Tale"3:21
    4."T.V. Caesar"5:54

    Side two
    No.TitleLength
    1."A Souvenir of London"3:21
    2."Bringing Home the Bacon"4:18
    3."For Liquorice John"4:26
    4."Fires (Which Burnt Brightly)"5:08
    5."Robert`s Box"4:49

    Bonus tracks (2009 Salvo Records reissue)
    No.TitleLength
    1."Grand Hotel" (raw track without orchestral)6:09
    2."Bringing Home the Bacon" (raw track featuring Dave Ball)6:06

    2018 remastered edition – disc one
    No.TitleLength
    1."Grand Hotel" (raw track without orchestra)6:09
    2."Bringing Home the Bacon" (Dave Ball-era recording)6:06
    3."Toujours L`amour" (early take)3:40
    4."Fires (Which Burn Brightly)" (early take)5:04
    5."Robert`s Box" (early take)4:39

    2018 remastered edition – disc two : Live on RTBF TV, Belgium 1973 (DVD)
    No.TitleLength
    1."Bringing Home the Bacon"
    2."Grand Hotel"
    3."Fires (Which Burnt Brightly)"
    4."A Salty Dog"
    5."A Rum Tale"
    6."Conquistador"
    7."For Liquorice John"
    8."Power Failure"
    9."A Souvenir of London"

    Personnel

    Procol Harum

    • Gary Brooker – vocals, piano
    • Mick Grabham – guitar
    • Chris Copping – organ
    • Alan Cartwright – bass guitar, acoustic bass
    • B.J. Wilson – drums, percussion
    • Keith Reid – lyrics

    with:

    • Christiane Legrand – vocals (8)
    • The Pahene Recorder Ensemble – guest appearance (6)

    Technical

    • John Punter – engineer
    • Spencer Zahn – artwork, design
    • Jeffrey Weisel – photography, drawings in internal booklet

    Charts

    Chart (1973)

    Peak
    position

    Australian Albums (Kent Music Report)[10]

    28

    Austrian Albums (Ö3 Austria)[11]

    6

    Canada Top Albums/CDs (RPM)[12]

    18

    Dutch Albums (Album Top 100)[13]

    9

    Finnish Albums (The Official Finnish Charts)[14]

    6

    German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[15]

    24

    Norwegian Albums (VG-lista)[16]

    8

    US Billboard 200[17]

    21

    Certifications

    Region

    CertificationCertified units/sales

    United Kingdom (BPI)[18]

    Silver

    60,000^

    ^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.

    Legacy

    Douglas Adams claimed that the idea for The Restaurant at the End of the Universe was inspired by the title track, "which he wanted to run throughout the whole Milliways section" (of the original BBC Radio series of The Hitch Hiker`s Guide to the Galaxy). However, according to the show`s producer, Geoffrey Perkins, "Douglas was unable to explain clearly what connection it actually had" with the concept and so the idea was abandoned.[19]

    1973 studio album by Procol Harum

    Grand Hotel is the sixth studio album by Procol Harum. Released in 1973, it signalled a change of direction for the band. Guitarist Dave Ball, who had joined the band for their live album the previous year, left shortly after the photo shoot for the proposed album`s cover, to be replaced by Mick Grabham. Grabham`s head was superimposed on the front and back cover of the album on Ball`s body. Although the band had gone through significant personnel changes in previous years, the band would enter its most stable phase with this lineup.

    The album reached No. 21 on the Billboard album charts. It peaked at #4 in Denmark,[2] where the group was always well received.

    Although Grand Hotel appears on the surface to be a concept album, the "concept", according to lyricist Keith Reid, doesn`t extend beyond the title tune.[3]

    The single "A Souvenir of London" was banned by the BBC for the reference to venereal disease in its lyrics. Reid claimed that the song was really inspired (regardless of how it turned out and was interpreted) by a visit to a souvenir shop near George Martin`s AIR Studios where the album was recorded. "Almost every album has had at least one comic song...and this one was a bit tongue in cheek" Reid stated as part of an interview for the 2009 CD reissue.[4]

    Critical reception

    Professional ratings
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    Christgau`s Record GuideC[5]

    Reviewing for Rolling Stone in 1973, Bud Scoppa called Grand Hotel a "confused and uneven transitional album" and "a collection of overblown production jobs that, at their worst, approach self-parody, and simpler, less grandiose tracks that suggest Procol Harum may yet find a way out of the corner they have worked themselves into."[6] Village Voice critic Robert Christgau similarly noted the split in musical identity: "For years, these guys have vacillated between a menu of grits that certainly ain`t groceries and larks` tongues in aspic. Despite their current white-tie conceit, they still haven`t decided."[7]

    In a retrospective review, AllMusic`s James A. Gardner gave the album three-and-a-half out of five stars and said the replacement of the band`s original guitarist Robin Trower with the "capable, even powerful, but not nearly as distinctive" Mick Grabham resulted in a greater reliance on "ornate arrangements than guitar riffs, making this somewhat more dignified than either of their previous studio albums, Home and Broken Barricades."[8]

    2009 Salvo reissue

    In 2009 Salvo reissued the CD remastered by Nick Robbins. Vocalist/keyboardist/composer Gary Brooker and lyricist Keith Reid supplemented the original CD with two bonus tracks. Both were "raw" tracks; i.e., they did not feature overdubs. One of the bonus tracks, "Bringing Home the Bacon", is the only one to feature former guitarist Dave Ball. The 2009 reissue also featured an essay by Patrick Humphries and was reissued in a cardboard sleeve.

    Record Store Day UK 2021 release

    A newly remastered limited edition vinyl LP of Grand Hotel was released on Record Store Day UK, 12 June 2021 on the Esoteric Recordings label. This release was limited to 1000 copies in 180g white vinyl. Newly remastered from the original master tapes and cut at Abbey Road Studios, it has a gatefold sleeve and facsimile of the original lyric book.[9]

    Track listing

    All tracks are written by Gary Brooker and Keith Reid

    Side one
    No.TitleLength
    1."Grand Hotel"6:08
    2."Toujours L`amour"3:32
    3."A Rum Tale"3:21
    4."T.V. Caesar"5:54

    Side two
    No.TitleLength
    1."A Souvenir of London"3:21
    2."Bringing Home the Bacon"4:18
    3."For Liquorice John"4:26
    4."Fires (Which Burnt Brightly)"5:08
    5."Robert`s Box"4:49

    Bonus tracks (2009 Salvo Records reissue)
    No.TitleLength
    1."Grand Hotel" (raw track without orchestral)6:09
    2."Bringing Home the Bacon" (raw track featuring Dave Ball)6:06

    2018 remastered edition – disc one
    No.TitleLength
    1."Grand Hotel" (raw track without orchestra)6:09
    2."Bringing Home the Bacon" (Dave Ball-era recording)6:06
    3."Toujours L`amour" (early take)3:40
    4."Fires (Which Burn Brightly)" (early take)5:04
    5."Robert`s Box" (early take)4:39

    2018 remastered edition – disc two : Live on RTBF TV, Belgium 1973 (DVD)
    No.TitleLength
    1."Bringing Home the Bacon"
    2."Grand Hotel"
    3."Fires (Which Burnt Brightly)"
    4."A Salty Dog"
    5."A Rum Tale"
    6."Conquistador"
    7."For Liquorice John"
    8."Power Failure"
    9."A Souvenir of London"

    Personnel

    Procol Harum

    • Gary Brooker – vocals, piano
    • Mick Grabham – guitar
    • Chris Copping – organ
    • Alan Cartwright – bass guitar, acoustic bass
    • B.J. Wilson – drums, percussion
    • Keith Reid – lyrics

    with:

    • Christiane Legrand – vocals (8)
    • The Pahene Recorder Ensemble – guest appearance (6)

    Technical

    • John Punter – engineer
    • Spencer Zahn – artwork, design
    • Jeffrey Weisel – photography, drawings in internal booklet

    Charts

    Chart (1973)

    Peak
    position

    Australian Albums (Kent Music Report)[10]

    28

    Austrian Albums (Ö3 Austria)[11]

    6

    Canada Top Albums/CDs (RPM)[12]

    18

    Dutch Albums (Album Top 100)[13]

    9

    Finnish Albums (The Official Finnish Charts)[14]

    6

    German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[15]

    24

    Norwegian Albums (VG-lista)[16]

    8

    US Billboard 200[17]

    21

    Certifications

    Region

    CertificationCertified units/sales

    United Kingdom (BPI)[18]

    Silver

    60,000^

    ^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.

    Legacy

    Douglas Adams claimed that the idea for The Restaurant at the End of the Universe was inspired by the title track, "which he wanted to run throughout the whole Milliways section" (of the original BBC Radio series of The Hitch Hiker`s Guide to the Galaxy). However, according to the show`s producer, Geoffrey Perkins, "Douglas was unable to explain clearly what connection it actually had" with the concept and so the idea was abandoned.[19]

    DISCOGRAFÍA

    No videos available