- New Masters
-
New Masters Studio album by Cat Stevens Released December 1967 Recorded 5 October 1967,
Decca Studios, West Hampstead, LondonGenre Rock Length 30:14 (Original)
50:69 (Reissue)Label Deram Records Producer Mike Hurst Cat Stevens chronology Matthew and Son
(1967)New Masters
(1967)Mona Bone Jakon
(1970)Professional ratings Review scores Source Rating Allmusic [1] New Masters is an album by singer-songwriter Cat Stevens. The album was released in December 1967 by Deram Records, a new subsidiary of Decca Recordsas a follow up to the highly successful "Matthew and Son". The label was disappointed by the album's poor sales, after the success of Matthew and Son, which had produced several hit singles and made the UK Top Ten Albums. New Masters in sharp contrast generated little interest and did not even chart in either the U.K. or the United States. The single "Kitty"/"Blackness of the Night" languished at #47, becoming Stevens' first single to miss the top 40. This was a sudden and steep commercial decline from the meteoric success Stevens enjoyed with his earlier recordings.[2]
Stevens attributed at least some of the album's failings to producer Mike Hurst, who gave the coffee house oriented songs elaborate baroque arrangements a far cry from the stripped down folk style which Stevens was eager to pursue. One song from the collection,"The First Cut Is the Deepest" has become a minor classic through the years having been covered by many other artists with considerably more success than Stevens' original. In the wake of "New Masters" flop, Stevens ended up selling the song for £30 to P.P. Arnold (formerly of the Ike and Tina Turner Revue) and propelled the former Ikette to fame in the UK,[3] In the decades to come it would also be a hit for Rod Stewart, Sheryl Crow, James Morrison and Keith Hampshire. Hampshire's version reached no.1 on the Canadian charts in 1973. Other versions have been rendered by singer Barbara Jones, Colm Wilkinson of Les Misérables and Jesus Christ Superstar fame, Duffy and the Jools Holland Rhythm & Blues Orchestra.
Contents
Track listing
All tracks composed by Cat Stevens; except where indicated
Side one
- "Kitty" – 2:23
- "I'm So Sleepy" – 2:24
- "Northern Wind" – 2:51
- "The Laughing Apple" – 2:39
- "Smash Your Heart" – 3:02
- "Moonstone" – 2:18
Side two
- "The First Cut Is the Deepest" – 3:03
- "I'm Gonna Be King" – 2:30
- "Ceylon City" – 2:29
- "Blackness of the Night" – 2:31
- "Come on Baby (Shift That Log)" – 3:52
- "I Love Them All" – 2:12
Bonus tracks (2003 CD reissue)
- "Image of Hell" – 3:08
- "Lovely City (When Do You Laugh?)" – 2:43
- "The View from the Top" – 3:36
- "Here Comes My Wife" – 3:00
- "It's a Supa (Dupa) Life" – 2:54
- "Where Are You?" (Stevens, Jimmy McHugh) – 3:03
- "A Bad Night" – 3:11
Personnel
- Cat Stevens – guitar, piano, vocals
- Chris Hunt – drums on Lovely City
- Arthur Greenslade, Lew Warburton, Ivor Raymonde – music direction
References
- ^ Allmusic review
- ^ Yusuflifeline Official Website
- ^ Marrin, Minette (26 September 2004). "Profile: Yusuf Islam aka Cat Stevens: Not so much a zealot more a lost musician". The Sunday Times. http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/article486773.ece. Retrieved 22 July 2008.
Categories:- 1960s rock album stubs
- Cat Stevens albums
- 1967 albums
- Deram Records albums
- English-language albums
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