Arthur's theme (Best that you can do) - Christopher Cross - 1981
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Christopher Cross: Biografia | Biography
Fonte: edel.it
L’impressionante
carriera di Christopher
Cross è
iniziata nel 1981 con un album che è ancora considerato uno dei
debutti migliori e di maggior successo nella storia del rock. Il suo
omonimo album di debutto è stato immediatamente premiato dalla
critica come un
"capolavoro rock" e in pochi mesi, tre
brani hanno conquistato il 1 ° posto nelle classifiche mondiali
("Ride Like The Wind", "All Right" e "Sailing").
Cross ha vinto 5 Grammy Award nel 1981 tra cui Best New Artist e Best
Song ("Sailing").
L'album,
con il suo iconico albatros in copertina e 20 milioni di copie
vendute, è stato un successo talmente grande da costringere Cross a
fissarsi un obiettivo fermo per non rimanerne travolto.
La qualità
della sua musica, la coerenza e l’integrità artistica sono sempre
state in cima alle sue priorità.
Album
dopo album ha mantenuto il suo obiettivo, grazie all’eccezionale
songwriting, le intense performance e l’alto livello di abilità di
musicista. In questo modo Cross è "sopravvissuto" al
successo con il suo originale mix di rock, soul e blues, combinati
alla sua sensibilità e alla peculiarità della sua voce.
Nel
corso degli anni la musica di Christopher
Cross ha
guadagnato il rispetto e l'apprezzamento di alcuni dei migliori
musicisti di sempre, come dimostra la lista delle sue straordinarie
collaborazioni: Don Henley - Eagles, Michael McDonald - The Doobie
Brothers, Brian Wilson dei Beach Boys sono solo alcuni dei numerosi
artisti con cui Cross ha lavorato. Una collaborazione merita una
menzione speciale, il lavoro con Burt Bacharach nel 1984 per la
canzone “Arthur‘s Theme” per cui vinse l’Oscar.
Il
suo catalogo e le antologie non hanno mai smesso di essere dei best
seller e le sue canzoni sono sempre rimaste fra le più suonate dalle
radio mondiali.
Nel
2011, Christopher
Cross ha
pubblicato l’acclamato "Doctor Faith", il primo album con
materiale nuovo in 12 anni. Un album incredibilmente forte
protagonista di un tour mondiale in cui Cross e la sua band hanno
saputo perfettamente alternare vecchi classici alle nuove
composizioni.
Ora Christopher
Cross torna
con il suo nuovo lavoro "Secret Ladder".
L’impressionante
carriera di Christopher
Cross è
iniziata nel 1981 con un album che è ancora considerato uno dei
debutti migliori e di maggior successo nella storia del rock. Il
suo
omonimo album di debutto è stato immediatamente premiato dalla
critica come un "capolavoro rock" e in pochi mesi, tre
brani hanno conquistato il 1 ° posto nelle classifiche mondiali
("Ride Like The Wind", "All Right" e "Sailing").
Cross ha vinto 5 Grammy Award nel
1981 tra cui Best New Artist e Best
Song ("Sailing"). L'album,
con il suo iconico albatros in copertina e 20 milioni di copie
vendute, è stato un successo talmente grande da costringere Cross a
fissarsi un obiettivo fermo per non rimanerne travolto. La qualità
della sua musica,
la coerenza e l’integrità artistica sono sempre
state in cima alle sue priorità.
Album
dopo album ha mantenuto il suo obiettivo, grazie all’eccezionale
songwriting, le intense performance e l’alto livello di abilità di
musicista. In questo modo Cross è
"sopravvissuto" al
successo con il suo originale mix di rock, soul e blues, combinati
alla sua sensibilità e alla peculiarità della sua voce.
Nel
corso degli anni la musica di Christopher
Cross ha
guadagnato il rispetto e l'apprezzamento di alcuni dei migliori
musicisti di sempre, come dimostra la lista delle sue straordinarie
collaborazioni: Don Henley - Eagles, Michael McDonald - The Doobie
Brothers, Brian Wilson dei Beach Boys sono solo alcuni dei numerosi
artisti con cui Cross ha lavorato. Una collaborazione merita una
menzione speciale, il lavoro con Burt Bacharach nel 1984 per la
canzone “Arthur‘s Theme” per cui vinse l’Oscar.
Il
suo catalogo e le antologie non hanno mai smesso di essere dei best
seller e le sue canzoni sono sempre rimaste fra le più suonate dalle
radio mondiali.
Nel
2011, Christopher
Cross ha
pubblicato l’acclamato "Doctor Faith", il primo album con
materiale nuovo in 12 anni. Un album incredibilmente forte
protagonista di un tour mondiale in cui Cross e la sua band hanno
saputo perfettamente alternare vecchi classici alle nuove
composizioni. Ora Christopher
Cross torna
con il suo nuovo lavoro "Secret Ladder".
Source: christophercross.com
Christopher Cross made history with his 1980 self-titled debut album, winning five Grammy Awards, including—for the first time ever—the four most prestigious awards: Record of the Year (for the single “Sailing”), Album of the Year, Song of the Year (also for “Sailing”), and Best New Artist.
Now,
30+ years after his extraordinary emergence into the music business,
Cross continues his recording and performing career with a new album,
Secret Ladder, that evokes the
artistry of such great
singer-songwriters as Joni Mitchell and Randy Newman while addressing
contemporary concerns head-on – a combination which is sure to
please his loyal fan base.
Indeed, the 13 tracks, mostly written with his longtime collaborator Rob Meurer, continues the exploration of adult subject matter broached in his preceding album Doctor Faith (2011).
“My passion and commitment
to music haven’t diminished a bit, and I make no apologies for
exploring mature subjects,” says the San Antonio native, now living
in Austin after decades in Southern California.
“Of
course, I’m still a romantic at heart,” adds Cross, whose classic
hits – including “Ride Like the Wind,” from Christopher
Cross, and the Oscar-winning "Arthur's Theme (Best
That You Can Do)" from the film starring Liza Minelli and Dudley
Moore – remain staples on radio to this day.
This romantic side is readily evident on Secret Ladder songs like “Simple,” in which he elicits the tuneful sense of love and serenity that marked “Sailing.” But from the album’s first song, Cross evinces a sharpened focus in addition to his magic melodic touch.
The bluesy “Reverend Blowhard” “is an unvarnished commentary on TV evangelists,” says Cross. He acknowledges a definite cynicism in this opening song that bears the influence of both Newman and Steely Dan’s Donald Fagen and Walter Becker, “who are lifelong influences on the songs Rob and I write.”
There
are other hard-hitting songs on Secret Ladder, most notably “Got To
Be a Better Way,” which rails against a man “seething in his
world of carbohydrates and TV” while
lacking any empathy for his
fellow man, and “Island of Anger.” “We look back at our lives
and see the idealism when we were kids,” Cross reflects, “and
then look at the way things are now and see how so many are
disillusioned and almost immobilized with outrage.”
Yet Cross remains a spiritual, if not religious, artist, and the Secret Ladder album title manifests this. The conceptual album cover art, by photographer/graphic designer Sandrine Lee, expressly suggests a Magritte painting in its depiction of human figures climbing the
fretboard of an upright acoustic guitar surrounded by a blue sky
filled with clouds, at the same time invoking Joni Mitchell’s lyric
in “For the Roses”—“And pour your simple sorrow / To the
sound hole and your knee.”
“I
write my songs on the guitar, and that’s how I realize my
spirituality” says Cross. “Music is the source, the wellspring.
The people coming out of the guitar’s sound hole on the cover are
climbing the ladder to a higher plane.”
Cross also notes that Secret Ladder’s “I Don’t See it Your Way” is a Joni Mitchell-influenced track. “I dedicated my last album to her,” says Cross. “She remains my biggest influence, musically. She’s a hero to both Rob and me. This song is about the end of a relationship, and we tried to write it in a very Joni-like feel and style.”
As always, Cross enlisted the finest support musicians, including bassist Will Lee (of the Fab Faux and Late Night with David Letterman), drummer Keith Carlock (Steely Dan and Toto), guitarist Eric Johnson, saxophonist David Mann, and vocalists Michael McDonald and Jeff Foskett (Brian Wilson’s musical director).
“Eric
and Michael are usually on every record I make,” says Cross, and in
McDonald’s case, he joins Cross vocally on the poignant and
uplifting anthem, “Light the World,” which also features an
African chorus alternating the lyrics in Swahili.
“I have travelled to Africa with my kids, my daughter was a youth AIDS ambassador,” explains Cross. “She helped with testing in a village in Tanzania and spent another week in Kenya.
I was very
touched by the people I encountered there. I wrote the song with
Stephen Bray who is a close friend and a wonderful collaborator. He
worked with Madonna early in her career and composed music for The
Color Purple on Broadway. For the Swahili chorus, we
enlisted the
assistance of the interpreter we had in Africa who was the head of
African Studies at UCLA. It is really a magical component to the
song. You feel like you know what they’re saying, even though you
don’t.”
“The
Times I Needed You” employs a vocal chorus, arranged by Meurer,
intentionally reminiscent of the Beach Boys. “It’s very much a
tribute,” says Cross. “Brian Wilson’s writing was a big
influence on me and Carl Wilson was my No. 1 vocal influence growing
up. Years
later, we became very close. Carl sang on my second album
(1983’s Another Page), and we did a lot of touring together and
vocal sessions for other artists. He’d always say, ‘We make a
nice sound’—I just treasure that.”
While
Cross is an avowed pacifist, he is a big supporter of those who serve
in the armed forces. Secret Ladder includes the late-added track,
“We Will Remember You,” as a means of honoring their service.
“My father was an Army doctor and my mother, a nurse,” he says. “I feel strongly that returning vets and those who made the ultimate sacrifice deserve to be recognized and never forgotten. The song itself is neither pro- nor anti-war. The children’s choir really
enhances the message. We recorded it after the album was finished,
but I felt that it definitely needed to be included.”
Cross’
own children influenced the instructive “Wonderland,” a dreamy,
lyrical take on reality which is enlivened by Johnson’s rock guitar
play. “It’s a general thesis on where things are, a way of
looking at life,” says Cross, “and how we're wishful for our kids
and their future. At the same time, it’s hard not to be frustrated
and cynical.”
Secret
Ladder ends with the loving, lushly orchestrated “A Letter to My
Children.” “It’s a very personal song,” says Cross. “I
wanted to make a lasting statement for my kids that reflected both
the wonderful mystery of their births and my deep feelings for them
now that they’re grown.”
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