Description:
Musicians :
Randy Travis (lead vocals), Shane Keister, Bobby Wood, Dennis Burnside (keyboards), Kyle Lehning (keyboards, background vocals), Bobby Thompson, Mark Casstevens, Mark Hembree, Kenny Bell (acoustic guitar), Fred Newell, Keith Stegall, Steve Gibson, Greg Jennings (electric guitar), Larry Byrom (acoustic & electric guitar), Mark O'Connor (fiddle, mandolin), Doyle Grisham (steel guitar), Hoot Hester (fiddle), Jerry Douglas (dobro), Don Jackson (clarinet), Paul Overstreet, Lisa Silver, Diane Stegall, Baillie & the Boys, Thomas Brannon, Paul Davis, Phil Forrest (background vocals), Michael Rhodes, Jack Williams, David Hungate (bass guitar), Blaine Sprouse (fiddle), Terry McMillan, Kirk "Jelly Roll" Johnson (harmonica, percussion), Larrie Londin, James Stroud, Eddie Bayers (drums).
MASTERED FROM THE ORIGINAL ANALOG TAPES AND PRESSED AT RTI FOR AUDIOPHILE SOUND !
1/2" / 30 IPS analog master to DSD 256 to analog console to lathe !
Nobody could have predicted the impact Randy Travis' proper debut would make on country music when it was released in 1986. Recorded by a virtually unknown singer-songwriter who had once been rejected by every major label, and bolstered by production and arrangements that spotlight Travis' impeccable vocals, Storms of Life spurred a stylistic sea change that would soon sweep Nashville and place the North Carolina native at the center of the neotraditionalist movement. More than three decades later, the LP's brilliance looms larger than ever.
Mastered from the original analog master tapes, pressed on ultra-quiet vinyl at RTI, and issued in partnership with Warner Nashville in commemoration of the record's 35th anniversary, Mobile Fidelity's numbered-edition 180 gram vinyl LP of Storms of Life stands as the first contemporary country audiophile reissue and a testament to Travis' Country Music Hall of Fame legacy. Housed in a single-pocket tip-on gatefold sleeve with new artwork, the quadruple-platinum album now boasts stellar transparency, breathtaking clarity, broad dynamics, and gorgeous tonalities that allow listeners the opportunity to experience one of the greatest vocalists in recent memory with unparalleled intimacy, realism, and breadth.
Produced by Kyle Lehning, and shaped to go against the mellowness and softness that were part of the then-current county-pop mold boosted by the popularity of Urban Cowboy, Storms of Life features fully formed architecture and expert instrumental support that benefit from the meticulous sonic restoration. Details such as the patient swell and bloom of pedal-steel guitars; rise and carry of background vocalists; bluesy drift of harmonicas; depth of pianos; airiness, snap and twang of acoustic guitars; back-porch sweetness of fiddles and mandolins; and grounding pace of the drums come across with reference-quality sound. Each contributor gets their own space in the mix. Music aficionados take note: Jerry Douglas, Mark O'Connor, Eddie Bayers, and David Hungate are just a few of the prized session musicians involved.
For all the merit afforded by the blend of honky tonk, country and western, and balladry, nothing eclipses what Travis brings to the project. Coupled with the back-to-basics songwriting, his inimitable presence is why Storms of Life remains as fresh today as it was the year Top Gun premiered in cinemas. He approaches every song with an uncanny modesty, his conservational drawl and casual demeanor nearly concealing the power, reach, and artisan-like effortlessness that inhabit each note he sings. Akin to groundbreaking icons such as Frank Sinatra and Hank Williams, Travis never overdoes it; rather, he relies on instinct, and combined with his golden pipes, never sounds less than completely invested.
On Storms of Life, the gateway to a sterling career laden with hit albums and major awards, Travis uses such assets to maximum effect. Evidence of his greatness arrives immediately on the opening "On the Other Hand", a clever take on an oft-worn country topic (unfaithfulness) and whose title ranks as one of the finest puns in the genre. Rich, steady, calm, and seemingly able to reach down into any bystander's soul, Travis' voice straddles tenderness and ache, reflecting the difficult situational divide facing the narrator, whose heart tugs him in one direction and his obligation another. It isn't the only instance where the then 27 year-old wades into messy emotional territory and retains an unshakable penchant for balance and spareness.
Indeed, the aptly named Storms of Life largely concerns itself with the human condition and the memories, ruminations, meditations, wishes, and regrets that accompany it. On the two-stepping title track, Travis chronicles his circumstances with humor and color all the while emerging with a keen perspective. Busted relationships inform the upbeat, string- and choir-accented "Diggin' up Bones" and sentimental albeit sad "No Place Like Home". For "Reasons I Cheat", the protagonist makes no apologies for his behavior as Travis uncorks deep, grainy syllables amid the quiet that threaten to freeze the listener in place.
Akin to the understatement he shows on the lost-love story "1982" and toe-tapping "There'll Always Be a Honky Tonk Somewhere", Travis unlike some of the song narrators remains in control throughout Storms of Life. For nearly 32 minutes, his spareness, articulation, subtlety, ease, and refinement set a template that has still yet to be matched in country music.
Please note : The catalog number for Storms of Life is misprinted on the LP jacket spine as "MFSV 1-511" instead of the correct "MFSL 1-511". This title is normal 180 gram LP release, not a SuperVinyl release.
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