Dreamland Express

发行时间:1985-06-01
发行公司:索尼音乐
简介:  It's About Time-- were about relationships breaking down, about falling out of love. Dreamland Express is more optimistic -- it's about falling in love again." So said John Denver upon the release of Dreamland Express, and it's a fair remark except for one thing: the album is not about John Denver falling in love again. Denver contributed only four of the album's 11 songs, and on his numbers, he is still talking about falling out of love. From the title track, which finds him awake at four a.m. again, to "A Wild Heart Looking For Home," in which he is "sleeping without you" and "hoping that someone might phone." It's only on the cover songs that Denver gets to express positive romantic feelings, and even those have a certain nostalgic sense. Whether the songs are actually from the 1950s, such as Roy Orbison's "Claudette," or more recent, such as "I'm In The Mood To Be Desired," they have an early rock & roll style to them. So, it's still more like remembered love than new love. Denver has toned down the world peace themes. Though "Trail Of Tears" has a Native American theme, and his own "African Sunrise" chronicles a trip the singer took for UNICEF, the songs are shunted off to the end of the record. The intention seems to have been to reverse Denver's diminishing record sales by seeking sunnier outside material, but Dreamland Express just comes off as a less-personal effort, and it was not a success.
  It's About Time-- were about relationships breaking down, about falling out of love. Dreamland Express is more optimistic -- it's about falling in love again." So said John Denver upon the release of Dreamland Express, and it's a fair remark except for one thing: the album is not about John Denver falling in love again. Denver contributed only four of the album's 11 songs, and on his numbers, he is still talking about falling out of love. From the title track, which finds him awake at four a.m. again, to "A Wild Heart Looking For Home," in which he is "sleeping without you" and "hoping that someone might phone." It's only on the cover songs that Denver gets to express positive romantic feelings, and even those have a certain nostalgic sense. Whether the songs are actually from the 1950s, such as Roy Orbison's "Claudette," or more recent, such as "I'm In The Mood To Be Desired," they have an early rock & roll style to them. So, it's still more like remembered love than new love. Denver has toned down the world peace themes. Though "Trail Of Tears" has a Native American theme, and his own "African Sunrise" chronicles a trip the singer took for UNICEF, the songs are shunted off to the end of the record. The intention seems to have been to reverse Denver's diminishing record sales by seeking sunnier outside material, but Dreamland Express just comes off as a less-personal effort, and it was not a success.