Feasting With Panthers

发行时间:2002-01-01
发行公司:CD Baby
简介:  William Topley, born and bred in England, nurtured on a diet of blues and rock and roll, has been building a seriously dedicated fan base in the U.S. ever since the release of Prince of the Deep Water in 1991, his first album with his band The Blessing. Producer Neil Dorfsman (Sting, Dire Straits) described him as “the most original songwriter I’ve heard for years.” The influences, still recognisable in his music, were already there - The Stones, Van Morrison, the best of soul and southern rock. Topley was on his way. The album catapulted The Blessing into a world tour, videos in Jamaica, TV stations in Paris and hockey stadiums in Germany with Simply Red and Level 42.   Legendary Rolling Stones Producer Jimmy Miller, who produced The Blessing’s second album Locusts and Wild Honey, was equally enthusiastic. “They’re right up my alley. I haven’t had such a good relationship with a band since Traffic.”   Next came Mixed Blessing, on which Topley worked with guitarist/songwriter Dominic Miller, best known for his work with Sting. “It’s only a matter of time,” says Dominic about Topley. “Watch this space!”   Last year’s album, Spanish Wells, saw Topley straight off a US tour and straight into the studio. For the first time, Topley blended the premeditated songwriting process with the excitement of live musicians making it all happen. “It took me until now to understand the cryptic comment ‘It’s all in the joy of discovery,’ that Jimmy [Miller] made years ago,” says Topley.   And this is what Feasting with Panthers is about. The songs, written on and off the road, are a journey of discovery, painted against a big sky… tracing the southern states down the coastline across the Triangle into the Caribbean and the patois melting pot… taking a white ship down to Portobello Bay.   So why Feasting with Panthers ?   “Working in music for 10 years has shown me a world far wider than I would ever have known,” says Topley. “It doesn’t take a poetic sensibility to appreciate Jamaica in moonlight or Spain on a sunny afternoon. But often the most moving moments have happened to me in Belfast or Hamburg or on the lonely highways of the Midwest. I’ve ridden shotgun on the private jet and washed my hair on a cold street in Chicago. I’ve hung out with the cats, seen the Mansion House Blues. When you’re Feasting with Panthers , you witness the extremes of the feast, but you don’t get to eat. And there’s another side to it. Feasting with Panthers is what it feels like whenever I get together with the band and they take the songs to their extremes.”   Topley went into labour with Feasting with Panthers hard on the heels of his last US tour, testing many of the songs live, getting the band (Luke Brighty – guitar, James Eller – bass, Jim Kimberley – drums, Mark Taylor – keyboards) more involved in the organic process of writing and cutting the tracks than ever before. The album was born between touring time with Mark Knopfler, who says of Topley: “He’s big-hearted, emotional and strictly legit.”   So what gives the album its edge? Is it all in the voice, as some fans believe? Sure, he gives it some, this carpenter of sound, with his baritone tongue and groove that you just know has travelled some along the journey of discovery.   Or is it the new sound textures? The hardened drive with the harp of Simeon Jones or his far from Buena Vista sax. The grace and sleaze backing vocals of Lorraine McIntosh, Rachel Brown and Melanie Redmond. The velvet brass of the Urban Breeze horn section (Niles Hailstones – trumpet, Winston Rose – saxophones, Trevor Edwards – trombone).   Or could it be the culture-rainbow presence and guiding hand of producer Brian Tench, who cut the band live in the old Rolling Stones stomping ground of Richmond, Surrey, UK on their now-legendary EMI desk?   The songs endorse the sense of journey.   From “Back to Believing,” a driving brit-rock celebration, described by Topley as a tribute to the fans, written on the tour bus between (and about) Atlanta and Denver to “Magnolia,” a walking tour for the senses of the French Quarter of New Orleans with a sweet southern flower.   “I Can’t Wait,” written with Colin Vearncombe (a.k.a. Black) has shades of Free-meets-Tom Petty. The journey this time is to Paris, France, with its Georges V sheets and Crillon attitudes.   Of “Excuses,” Topley says, “any excuse to be in Jamaica. Noel Coward had the right idea: he lived in Jamaica in the winter and Switzerland in the summer!”   “Soul I Want” was written with Phil Thornally. “Phil wrote ‘Torn’ for Natalie Imbruglia,” says Topley. “The song is brought to life by Lorraine and Rachel.” It’s begging to be played loud on an FM radio station on Miami Beach.   In “La Habana,” written with London songwriter Robert Levinsky, you can sense the spirits of Ernest Hemingway and Graham Greene as Topley tours the midnight world of Havana’s old town. Pure romanticism in a minor key. And just wait for that saxophone solo!   The journey continues to “Los Largos” via a slow boat across the Gulf of Mexico to the mainland and down into Argentina. Smooth Latin dialogue. A cautionary tale set in Manhattan, Staten Island, Jamaica and Queens.   Of “So Bright,” Topley says, fondly: “Peter Tosh used to write love songs. Ijahman Levi still does. This is dedicated to him. And, on the other side of the ocean, to the bright light of Hogarth, ever-present in Chiswick, West London.”   “Desire is Sad” was inspired by a line from a Somerset Maugham short story about a journey across the Pacific in the 1920s: “The difference between happiness and sadness is in the trembling of a leaf.”   “Closer to You” was written in Nashville with Aimee Mayo and Chris Lindsey (“Amazed”). Topley, who lives in London, England, but spends a lot of time working in the U.S., expresses his feelings about commuting across the North Atlantic.   If real blues is your thing, try “Drake’s Drum” for size. Luke Brighty’s hard-edged tremolo guitar driving the rhythm against lyrics about the sacking of the mule train at Portobello, Panama. “The boldest deed by Drake, the master thief of the unknown world,” says Topley.   The album closes with the haunting “Highway One.” Topley wrote this in a motel in Florida. “Packing up the dirty clothes after another six weeks in the tour bus. On the road you hear stories that make a tyrant weep.”   Luke Lewis, President of Lost Highway, reckons William Topley, the only English signing to the label, represents contemporary British blues rock at its best. “Feasting with Panthers ?”, asks Lewis. “You’ve just got to hear it!” Enjoy the feast!
  William Topley, born and bred in England, nurtured on a diet of blues and rock and roll, has been building a seriously dedicated fan base in the U.S. ever since the release of Prince of the Deep Water in 1991, his first album with his band The Blessing. Producer Neil Dorfsman (Sting, Dire Straits) described him as “the most original songwriter I’ve heard for years.” The influences, still recognisable in his music, were already there - The Stones, Van Morrison, the best of soul and southern rock. Topley was on his way. The album catapulted The Blessing into a world tour, videos in Jamaica, TV stations in Paris and hockey stadiums in Germany with Simply Red and Level 42.   Legendary Rolling Stones Producer Jimmy Miller, who produced The Blessing’s second album Locusts and Wild Honey, was equally enthusiastic. “They’re right up my alley. I haven’t had such a good relationship with a band since Traffic.”   Next came Mixed Blessing, on which Topley worked with guitarist/songwriter Dominic Miller, best known for his work with Sting. “It’s only a matter of time,” says Dominic about Topley. “Watch this space!”   Last year’s album, Spanish Wells, saw Topley straight off a US tour and straight into the studio. For the first time, Topley blended the premeditated songwriting process with the excitement of live musicians making it all happen. “It took me until now to understand the cryptic comment ‘It’s all in the joy of discovery,’ that Jimmy [Miller] made years ago,” says Topley.   And this is what Feasting with Panthers is about. The songs, written on and off the road, are a journey of discovery, painted against a big sky… tracing the southern states down the coastline across the Triangle into the Caribbean and the patois melting pot… taking a white ship down to Portobello Bay.   So why Feasting with Panthers ?   “Working in music for 10 years has shown me a world far wider than I would ever have known,” says Topley. “It doesn’t take a poetic sensibility to appreciate Jamaica in moonlight or Spain on a sunny afternoon. But often the most moving moments have happened to me in Belfast or Hamburg or on the lonely highways of the Midwest. I’ve ridden shotgun on the private jet and washed my hair on a cold street in Chicago. I’ve hung out with the cats, seen the Mansion House Blues. When you’re Feasting with Panthers , you witness the extremes of the feast, but you don’t get to eat. And there’s another side to it. Feasting with Panthers is what it feels like whenever I get together with the band and they take the songs to their extremes.”   Topley went into labour with Feasting with Panthers hard on the heels of his last US tour, testing many of the songs live, getting the band (Luke Brighty – guitar, James Eller – bass, Jim Kimberley – drums, Mark Taylor – keyboards) more involved in the organic process of writing and cutting the tracks than ever before. The album was born between touring time with Mark Knopfler, who says of Topley: “He’s big-hearted, emotional and strictly legit.”   So what gives the album its edge? Is it all in the voice, as some fans believe? Sure, he gives it some, this carpenter of sound, with his baritone tongue and groove that you just know has travelled some along the journey of discovery.   Or is it the new sound textures? The hardened drive with the harp of Simeon Jones or his far from Buena Vista sax. The grace and sleaze backing vocals of Lorraine McIntosh, Rachel Brown and Melanie Redmond. The velvet brass of the Urban Breeze horn section (Niles Hailstones – trumpet, Winston Rose – saxophones, Trevor Edwards – trombone).   Or could it be the culture-rainbow presence and guiding hand of producer Brian Tench, who cut the band live in the old Rolling Stones stomping ground of Richmond, Surrey, UK on their now-legendary EMI desk?   The songs endorse the sense of journey.   From “Back to Believing,” a driving brit-rock celebration, described by Topley as a tribute to the fans, written on the tour bus between (and about) Atlanta and Denver to “Magnolia,” a walking tour for the senses of the French Quarter of New Orleans with a sweet southern flower.   “I Can’t Wait,” written with Colin Vearncombe (a.k.a. Black) has shades of Free-meets-Tom Petty. The journey this time is to Paris, France, with its Georges V sheets and Crillon attitudes.   Of “Excuses,” Topley says, “any excuse to be in Jamaica. Noel Coward had the right idea: he lived in Jamaica in the winter and Switzerland in the summer!”   “Soul I Want” was written with Phil Thornally. “Phil wrote ‘Torn’ for Natalie Imbruglia,” says Topley. “The song is brought to life by Lorraine and Rachel.” It’s begging to be played loud on an FM radio station on Miami Beach.   In “La Habana,” written with London songwriter Robert Levinsky, you can sense the spirits of Ernest Hemingway and Graham Greene as Topley tours the midnight world of Havana’s old town. Pure romanticism in a minor key. And just wait for that saxophone solo!   The journey continues to “Los Largos” via a slow boat across the Gulf of Mexico to the mainland and down into Argentina. Smooth Latin dialogue. A cautionary tale set in Manhattan, Staten Island, Jamaica and Queens.   Of “So Bright,” Topley says, fondly: “Peter Tosh used to write love songs. Ijahman Levi still does. This is dedicated to him. And, on the other side of the ocean, to the bright light of Hogarth, ever-present in Chiswick, West London.”   “Desire is Sad” was inspired by a line from a Somerset Maugham short story about a journey across the Pacific in the 1920s: “The difference between happiness and sadness is in the trembling of a leaf.”   “Closer to You” was written in Nashville with Aimee Mayo and Chris Lindsey (“Amazed”). Topley, who lives in London, England, but spends a lot of time working in the U.S., expresses his feelings about commuting across the North Atlantic.   If real blues is your thing, try “Drake’s Drum” for size. Luke Brighty’s hard-edged tremolo guitar driving the rhythm against lyrics about the sacking of the mule train at Portobello, Panama. “The boldest deed by Drake, the master thief of the unknown world,” says Topley.   The album closes with the haunting “Highway One.” Topley wrote this in a motel in Florida. “Packing up the dirty clothes after another six weeks in the tour bus. On the road you hear stories that make a tyrant weep.”   Luke Lewis, President of Lost Highway, reckons William Topley, the only English signing to the label, represents contemporary British blues rock at its best. “Feasting with Panthers ?”, asks Lewis. “You’ve just got to hear it!” Enjoy the feast!