The Parkerilla
Untitled | |
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [1] |
Robert Christgau | B−[2] |
Rolling Stone (Greil Marcus) | (unfavorable)[3] |
The Parkerilla is a 1978 live double album by Graham Parker and The Rumour. It was recorded at Winter Gardens, Bournemouth, Manchester Opera House, Apollo Theatre, Oxford and The Palladium, New York City; and mixed at Rockfield Studios, Wales.
The album was recorded as a contractual obligation album as Parker had already signed with Arista and was preparing "Squeezing Out Sparks" for that label. The album was longer than a traditional record and Mercury elected to release it as a double album. The single "Hey Lord Don't Ask Me Questions" was a re-recording of a song from the first album (and slightly retitled) with the song occupying the fourth side. [4]
The album met with a mixed reception from critics who were waiting for new material from Parker. [5]
In 1991, Rolling Stone ranked The Parkerilla number 64 on its list of 100 greatest album covers.[6] The cover photography was by Brian Griffin.
Track listing
All tracks composed by Graham Parker; except where indicated
- "Lady Doctor" 2:48
- "Fool's Gold" 4:23
- "Tear Your Playhouse Down" (Earl Randle) 3:50
- "Don't Ask Me Questions" 5:00
- "The Heat in Harlem" 7:35
- "Silly Thing" 3:15
- "Gypsy Blood" 5:15
- "Back to Schooldays" 2:40
- "Heat Treatment" 3:06
- "Watch the Moon Come Down" 5:15
- "New York Shuffle" 2:57
- "Soul Shoes" 3:23
- "Don't Ask Me Questions" 3:51
Personnel
- Graham Parker – vocals, guitar
- Brinsley Schwarz – guitar, slide guitar, backing vocals
- Bob Andrews – organ, piano, keyboards, backing vocals, musical director, horn arrangements
- Martin Belmont – guitar, backing vocals
- Andrew Bodnar – bass guitar
- Steve Goulding – drums, backing vocals
The Rumour Brass:
- Ray Bevis - tenor saxophone
- John Earle - tenor and baritone saxophone
- Chris Gower - trombone
- Dick Hanson - trumpet, flugelhorn
References
- ^ Deming, Mark. Graham Parker & the Rumour: The Parkerilla Review at AllMusic. Retrieved 7 October 2011.
- ^ Christgau, Robert. "Review: The Parkerilla". Robert Christgau. Retrieved 7 October 2011.
- ^ Marcus, Greil (15 June 1978). "Review: The Parkerilla". Rolling Stone.
- ^ Phil Hendricks. Parkerilla CD sleeve notes. Lemon Records. p. 2.
- ^ Phil Hendricks. Parkerilla CD sleeve notes. Lemon Records. p. 2.
- ^ Rolling Stone, November 14, 1991