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Chris Rea - The Road To Hell


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750 din
Stanje: Polovan bez oštećenja
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Isporuka: Pošta
CC paket (Pošta)
Post Express
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Plaćanje: Tekući račun (pre slanja)
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Grad: Novi Sad,
Novi Sad
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Izdavač: Ostalo
Žanr: Bluz, Pop, Rok
Poreklo: Strani izvođač

Original, made in Germany

Knjizica od 6 str.

Odlicno ocuvano

knjizica 5/5- Cd 5

Studio album by Chris Rea
Released 30 October 1989[1]
Recorded Miraval Studios, France
Genre
Blues rocksoft rockpop rock
Length 50:53
Label
WEAAtcoMagnetGeffen
Producer
Jon KellyChris Rea
Chris Rea chronology
New Light Through Old Windows
(1988) The Road to Hell
(1989) Auberge
(1991)
The Road to Hell is the tenth studio album by British singer-songwriter Chris Rea, released in 1989. Coming on the back of several strongly performing releases, it is Rea`s most successful studio album, and topped the UK Albums Chart for three weeks.[4][5] Hailed as a `modern masterpiece`, it was certified 6× Platinum by BPI in 2004.[6][7] The album demonstrates a thematic cohesion previously absent from Rea`s work, with the majority of the tracks containing strong elements of social commentary, addressing alienation, violence and redemption.[8] The second part of the two-part title track, `The Road to Hell (Pt. 2)`, is one of Rea`s most famous songs, and was his first UK Top 10 single. Geffen Records released the album in the US, adding the 1988 re-recording of `Let`s Dance` and different cover artwork.

Production
The album built on the upswing Rea had experienced in the previous few years, starting with a surge of popularity in Ireland. `Without the Irish and Shamrock Diaries there would have been no Road To Hell,` Rea said.[9] The album was written and recorded within four weeks.[8] He had a lot of trouble with the album arising out of the attitude of his record company, and he `recorded the next album – Auberge – before, as an agreement with Warner Brothers. So if Road To Hell didn’t work – and they said it won`t – we would jump straight away to Auberge and forget about it. Of course, the beginning to Road To Hell is a gospel blues thing. Warner Brothers went, ‘This is going to be over in five minutes’. But I did stand me ground, and it went No.1`.[10]

Songs
Throughout the album there are repeated references to increasing social dissolution and rising violence, including riots, murder and their irresponsible depiction on television news (You Must Be Evil), and `the perverted fear of violence` on city streets (The Road to Hell (Part 2)), where `it`s all gone crazy` amid fears that `someone`s gonna get killed out there` (Texas). Rea also targets industrial polluters` destruction of rivers (which `boil` with `poison`), and Thatcherism (which he also criticised on Shamrock Diaries` Steel River), dismissing notions of an `upwardly mobile freeway`, or that promises will be delivered on (That`s What They Always Say). A sense of suffocating doom suffuses the title track. Rea cries `We gotta get outta here!` (Texas) and `I`m getting out!` (That`s What They Always Say), and struggles to find an escape in Texas and Looking for a Rainbow. A prominent theme is the impact all of this is having on his daughter, who was six at the time (You Must Be Evil, Tell Me There`s a Heaven).[11]

In an interview for the deluxe edition of the album (2019), Rea said You Must Be Evil was inspired by a journalistic friend of his recounting that a report on someone having been necklaced in riots in South Africa would only make the television news if footage of the horrific event was obtained. `You start to see news as pornography,` Rea said. "If we have something horrible, it`s news!`... And I hate it, to this day.`[12] He recounts how his daughter saw the television report, and how his father-in-law tried to console her by saying that there is a heaven, which prompted Rea to write the song Tell Me There`s a Heaven, which was subsequently used in a 1991 public information film for the NSPCC. Over the years, Texas has been played on classic rock/AOR radio stations in Texas, and is sometimes played as background music before Texas Rangers baseball games at Rangers Ballpark in Arlington. Daytona is about the Ferrari 365 GTB/4 Daytona (Rea races a different model Ferrari), in which he sings about the car metaphorically, with the engine and tyre noise from the car fading out toward the end of the song.[13]

Cover art
The Leisure Process was commissioned to produce the artwork for the album cover by Max Hole. Creative Director John Carver personally handled the project, and commissioned and art directed the illustrator, Adrian Chesterman. Chesterman,[14] was also responsible for creating cover art for, amongst others, Motörhead`s 1979 Bomber album.

Track listing
All tracks are written by Chris Rea.

Original album
No. Title Length
1. `The Road to Hell (Part 1)` 4:52
2. `The Road to Hell (Part 2)` 4:32
3. `You Must Be Evil` 4:23
4. `Texas` 5:12
5. `Looking for a Rainbow` 8:02
6. `Your Warm and Tender Love` 4:33
7. `Daytona` 5:07
8. `That`s What They Always Say` 4:29
9. `I Just Wanna Be with You` 3:41
10. `Tell Me There`s a Heaven` 6:06
Total length: 50:58

Personnel
Chris Rea – vocals, keyboards, guitars
Kevin Leach – keyboards,
Max Middleton – acoustic piano, Fender Rhodes, string arrangements
Robert Ahwai – guitars
Eoghan O`Neill – bass
Martin Ditcham – drums, percussion
Gavyn Wright – concertmaster and conductor
Karen Boddington – additional vocals
Carol Kenyon – additional vocals
Linda Taylor – additional vocals
Production
Chris Rea – producer
Jon Kelly – producer
Neil Amor – engineer
Diane BJ Koné – engineer
Willie Grimston – coordinator
The Leisure Process – artwork, sleeve design
Jim Beach – management
John Knowles – management
Paul Lilly – management

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Za prodaju cd-ova : Plastične kutije su zamenjive i njih NE OCENJUJEM! Takodje zadnja strana iza plastike drzaca cd je vidljiva slika, za njih isto ne ide ocena, sve se vidi!




Predmet: 82197617
Original, made in Germany

Knjizica od 6 str.

Odlicno ocuvano

knjizica 5/5- Cd 5

Studio album by Chris Rea
Released 30 October 1989[1]
Recorded Miraval Studios, France
Genre
Blues rocksoft rockpop rock
Length 50:53
Label
WEAAtcoMagnetGeffen
Producer
Jon KellyChris Rea
Chris Rea chronology
New Light Through Old Windows
(1988) The Road to Hell
(1989) Auberge
(1991)
The Road to Hell is the tenth studio album by British singer-songwriter Chris Rea, released in 1989. Coming on the back of several strongly performing releases, it is Rea`s most successful studio album, and topped the UK Albums Chart for three weeks.[4][5] Hailed as a `modern masterpiece`, it was certified 6× Platinum by BPI in 2004.[6][7] The album demonstrates a thematic cohesion previously absent from Rea`s work, with the majority of the tracks containing strong elements of social commentary, addressing alienation, violence and redemption.[8] The second part of the two-part title track, `The Road to Hell (Pt. 2)`, is one of Rea`s most famous songs, and was his first UK Top 10 single. Geffen Records released the album in the US, adding the 1988 re-recording of `Let`s Dance` and different cover artwork.

Production
The album built on the upswing Rea had experienced in the previous few years, starting with a surge of popularity in Ireland. `Without the Irish and Shamrock Diaries there would have been no Road To Hell,` Rea said.[9] The album was written and recorded within four weeks.[8] He had a lot of trouble with the album arising out of the attitude of his record company, and he `recorded the next album – Auberge – before, as an agreement with Warner Brothers. So if Road To Hell didn’t work – and they said it won`t – we would jump straight away to Auberge and forget about it. Of course, the beginning to Road To Hell is a gospel blues thing. Warner Brothers went, ‘This is going to be over in five minutes’. But I did stand me ground, and it went No.1`.[10]

Songs
Throughout the album there are repeated references to increasing social dissolution and rising violence, including riots, murder and their irresponsible depiction on television news (You Must Be Evil), and `the perverted fear of violence` on city streets (The Road to Hell (Part 2)), where `it`s all gone crazy` amid fears that `someone`s gonna get killed out there` (Texas). Rea also targets industrial polluters` destruction of rivers (which `boil` with `poison`), and Thatcherism (which he also criticised on Shamrock Diaries` Steel River), dismissing notions of an `upwardly mobile freeway`, or that promises will be delivered on (That`s What They Always Say). A sense of suffocating doom suffuses the title track. Rea cries `We gotta get outta here!` (Texas) and `I`m getting out!` (That`s What They Always Say), and struggles to find an escape in Texas and Looking for a Rainbow. A prominent theme is the impact all of this is having on his daughter, who was six at the time (You Must Be Evil, Tell Me There`s a Heaven).[11]

In an interview for the deluxe edition of the album (2019), Rea said You Must Be Evil was inspired by a journalistic friend of his recounting that a report on someone having been necklaced in riots in South Africa would only make the television news if footage of the horrific event was obtained. `You start to see news as pornography,` Rea said. "If we have something horrible, it`s news!`... And I hate it, to this day.`[12] He recounts how his daughter saw the television report, and how his father-in-law tried to console her by saying that there is a heaven, which prompted Rea to write the song Tell Me There`s a Heaven, which was subsequently used in a 1991 public information film for the NSPCC. Over the years, Texas has been played on classic rock/AOR radio stations in Texas, and is sometimes played as background music before Texas Rangers baseball games at Rangers Ballpark in Arlington. Daytona is about the Ferrari 365 GTB/4 Daytona (Rea races a different model Ferrari), in which he sings about the car metaphorically, with the engine and tyre noise from the car fading out toward the end of the song.[13]

Cover art
The Leisure Process was commissioned to produce the artwork for the album cover by Max Hole. Creative Director John Carver personally handled the project, and commissioned and art directed the illustrator, Adrian Chesterman. Chesterman,[14] was also responsible for creating cover art for, amongst others, Motörhead`s 1979 Bomber album.

Track listing
All tracks are written by Chris Rea.

Original album
No. Title Length
1. `The Road to Hell (Part 1)` 4:52
2. `The Road to Hell (Part 2)` 4:32
3. `You Must Be Evil` 4:23
4. `Texas` 5:12
5. `Looking for a Rainbow` 8:02
6. `Your Warm and Tender Love` 4:33
7. `Daytona` 5:07
8. `That`s What They Always Say` 4:29
9. `I Just Wanna Be with You` 3:41
10. `Tell Me There`s a Heaven` 6:06
Total length: 50:58

Personnel
Chris Rea – vocals, keyboards, guitars
Kevin Leach – keyboards,
Max Middleton – acoustic piano, Fender Rhodes, string arrangements
Robert Ahwai – guitars
Eoghan O`Neill – bass
Martin Ditcham – drums, percussion
Gavyn Wright – concertmaster and conductor
Karen Boddington – additional vocals
Carol Kenyon – additional vocals
Linda Taylor – additional vocals
Production
Chris Rea – producer
Jon Kelly – producer
Neil Amor – engineer
Diane BJ Koné – engineer
Willie Grimston – coordinator
The Leisure Process – artwork, sleeve design
Jim Beach – management
John Knowles – management
Paul Lilly – management
82197617 Chris Rea - The Road To Hell

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