Jump to content

The Tower (Bob Catley album)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by GreenC bot (talk | contribs) at 03:44, 7 August 2018 (Rescued 1 archive link. Wayback Medic 2.1). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Untitled
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AOR Hard Rock Hotspot9.4/10[citation needed]
Classic Rock Magazine[citation needed]
HeavyHarmonies[1]
Mood Swings[2]
SFK9.2/10[citation needed]

The Tower is the debut solo studio album by Bob Catley, released by Frontiers Records in 1998.

Bob Catley collaborated with Ten frontman, and longstanding Magnum fan, Gary Hughes who wrote all the songs on The Tower. He wrote the songs having in mind classic Magnum tunes and trying to combine the epic scope of On a Storyteller's Night with Wings of Heaven commercial appeal.[3]

"I dug out all my classic old Magnum records and they inspired me to write in this style for Bob. Tony Clarkin is such a great writer. I think he's one of the most underrated writers around. Songs like "Les Mort Dansant" and "How Far Jerusalem" are simply stunning pieces of songwriting."[4] — Gary Hughes

Track listing

All songs written by Gary Hughes.

Disc 1

  1. "Dreams" — 6:46
  2. "Scream" — 7:32
  3. "Far Away" — 6:01
  4. "Deep Winter" — 5:25
  5. "Fire and Ice" — 5:33
  6. "Madrigal" — 6:43
  7. "Steel" — 5:00
  8. "The Tower" — 6:33
  9. "Fear of the Dark" — 6:31
  10. "Epilogue" [Instrumental] — 1:53

Disc 2 (Japanese Release)

  1. "Dreams" [Live] — 6:46
  2. "Scream" [Live] — 7:32
  3. "Far Away" [Live] — 6:01
  4. "Deep Winter" [Live] — 5:25
  5. "Lonely Night" [Live] (Tony Clarkin) — 0:00
  6. "Fire and Ice" [Live] — 5:33
  7. "On a Storyteller's Night" [Live] (Tony Clarkin) — 0:00
  8. "The Tower" [Live] — 6:33
  9. "Fear of the Dark" [Live] — 6:31
  10. "Just Like an Arrow" [Live] (Tony Clarkin) — 0:00

Personnel

Production

  • Produced by Gary Hughes
  • Engineered and Mixing by Ray Brophy
  • Recorded at Startrack Studios, Manchester
  • Mixed at Gracieland, Rochdale
  • Mastered by John Blamire at The Digital Audio Company
  • Additional Engineering by Neil Amison at Gracieland, Rochdale

References