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14.4.13

Roger Chapman & The Shortlist


Roger Chapman & The Shortlist - Maybe The Last Time Live - 2011-  Hypertension

Roger Chapman is a rock legend, and one of the great icons of British rock music, best known for his spectacular stage presence and amazing powerful vibrato vocals. He played with the hugely talented and original British band, Family, (who split up in the early 70’s). During their seven year lifespan, Family had achieved an almost unequalled standard of musical output and musicianship. Arguably, at least four of their eight albums can be regarded as rock classics.. Family were regarded by critics, and by the public in general, as one of Britain's finest rock bands. John Peel, the late, great BBC Radio 1 DJ, once said that he'd travel any distance to see Roger Chapman perform. Sadly, by the late seventies, Roger Chapman had practically disappeared from the music scene.The mechanics of the music business, e.g, glam rock, the dawn of punk, new wave, and romanticism, dictated the demise of many great rock and progressive rock bands, who had dominated the music scene, (especially in Britain), for so long. That is not to say that these new genres did not produce some great bands. However, the music scene at that time did not suit Roger Chapman's style of rock music, and never one to bow to commercialism, Roger went to Germany in the early eighties where he still spends most of his time, and is regarded as a cult figure there. He has also received well deserved Artist of the Year and Lifetime Achievement Awards from the German people. In 2009 Roger Chapman hinted at his permanent retiring from live gigging but “Chappo” is still rocking and long may he continue. Chappo has never sold out to commercialism and continues to play his own unique brand of great rock. “Maybe The Last Time Live” was recorded from a FOH desktop at the Munich Harley Festival, Germany on 8th August, 2011. Chappo doesn’t rely on many old Family favourites to make this a great gig. N.B: The Shortlist was a name used by Chappo for his backing musicians on tours. Buy his brilliant 1979 album, "Chappo", and listen to Family's classic "Bandstand", and "Music in a Doll's House" albums [All tracks @ 320 Kbps: File size = 160 Mb]

TRACKS

1 Sunset Vanilla
2 Kiss My Soul
3 Can I Get To Heaven
4 Moth To A Flame
5 This Could Be The Last Time
6 Shadow On The Wall
7 Blind Willie McTell
8 Son Of Red Moon
9 Who Pulled The Night Down On Me
10 Everybodies On The Short List
11 Let's Spend The Night Together

Tracks 1-4,8,9 composed by Roger Chapman: Tracks 5,11 composed by Jagger & Richards: Track 6 composed by Mike Oldfield: Track 7 composed by Bob Dylan: Track 10 composed by Mickey Jupp

BAND

Roger Chapman – Vocals
Geoff Whitehorn – Guitar, Vocals
Steve Simpson – Guitar, Mandolin, Vocals
Gary Twigg – Bass
Paul Hirsh – Keyboards, Vocals
John Lingwood – Vocals

BIO (WIKI)

Roger Chapman (born Roger Maxwell Chapman on April 8, 1942 in Leicester) is an English rock singer. Roger "Chappo" Chapman is probably best known for his participation in the English progressive band Family in the late 1960s through the early 1970s and subsequently, from 1973 to 1978, in Streetwalkers, a rock/R&B band. Prior to Family he had sung with this band's precursor, the Farinas. His idiosyncratic brand of on-stage showmanship and characteristic vibrato led to him becoming a cult figure on the British rock scene. Chapman once claimed he was trying to sing like both Little Richard and especially his idol Ray Charles.In the late 1970s Roger Chapman began a solo career and recorded his first solo album, Chappo. In 1983, Mike Oldfield recorded the album "Crises" featuring the song "Shadow On The Wall" sung by Roger Chapman. The song turned out to be a huge hit for Mike Oldfield (along with the even more popular "Moonlight Shadow"). As other musical styles, such as Punk Rock became more popular in England, Chapman began to have more success in other European countries, especially Germany, where he has spent much of his time since the early 1980s, winning Artist of the Year and a Lifetime Achievement Award.

MORE ABOUT ROGER CHAPMAN

Roger Chapman is best known for his barbed-wire voice, used to front British '70s rock acts Family and Streetwalkers. He began a long-awaited solo career in 1978 that has led to over a dozen full-length releases. Never heard of them? It's not surprising; album-wise, he's been camped out in Germany for 20 years. His first album and tour got high praise in his British homeland, but critics cut into him soon after. When the hassle-free German market beckoned, Chapman began to focus all subsequent work there, where he has become a musical hero, the "Working Class Artist." Chapman split with his longtime writing partner, Charlie Whitney, after the breakup of Streetwalkers in 1977. He surrounded himself with ace session musicians to cut a debut solo effort, Chappo. It was an album of strong rock which catered to the singer and not the musicians. An appearance on Germany's Rockpalast TV show and the ensuing hit single, "Let's Spend the Night Together," gave Chapman the shot of success he needed, so he set up operations in Germany. Live in Hamburg was a reassuring second album, demonstrating the live energy of this experienced yet stage-crazed performer. Studio albums over the next few years blended straight power rock with funk, R&B and soul, all topped with Chapman's characteristic vocal style. In the 1981 German music awards, Chapman was voted Best Singer, and his Hyenas Only Laugh For Fun won an award. Chapman and his backing band, the Shortlist, released two alter-ego albums in the early '80s as the Riff Burglars. These releases honored roots and classic rock by artists like Chuck Berry, Willie Dixon and Leiber & Stoller. A lead vocal on Mike Oldfield's 1983 hit, "Shadow on the Wall," also added to Chapman's diverse repertoire. Chapman's mid-'80s foray into polished studio sounds did not fare well with his audience. When his extended partnership with guitarist Geoff Whitehorn ran it's course, Chapman returned to pure rock form with 1989's Walking the Cat, which featured Alvin Lee and old friend, Bob Tench. Two compilations filled a silent period in the mid '90s, but 1996's Kiss My Soul was a comeback for the guy who never went away. It even got attention and a pressing in Chapman's British homeland, where he often tours but has no domestic releases. This was followed by 1998's A Turn Unstoned? and the 2-CD Anthology; the next year saw re-releases of Chappo and Mail Order Magic. Moth to a Flame was issued in early 2001. © Patrick Little, allmusic.com

5 comments:

A.O.O.F.C said...

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Password is aoofc

Anonymous said...

Hey mi amigo, muchas gracias por todos los puestos nuevos en su blog.
Todos ellos son muy buenos, para mi en su genero Thea Gilmore y Stuff Live At Montreux 1976 son muy buenos nuevamente mil gracias.

(Daniel)

A.O.O.F.C said...

Hola, mi amigo Daniel. Gracias. Estoy especialmente contento de que te gusta Thea Gilmore. Ella es constantemente ignorado por los medios de comunicación. TTU pronto ... Paul

Anonymous said...

Great post.Thanks for all those good music.Slavica.Please any chance for Family - 4 CD Box Set.

A.O.O.F.C said...

Hi,Slavica & thanks. I will try to post the Family set, but I can't promise. TTU soon...Paul