Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

The Tin Man Was a Dreamer

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Length
  
37:19

Artist
  
Nicky Hopkins

Label
  
Columbia Records

The Tin Man Was a Dreamer (1973)
  
No More Changes (1975)

Release date
  
23 April 1973

Genre
  
Pop rock

The Tin Man Was a Dreamer httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen113Tin

Released
  
23 April 1973 (US) 27 July 1973 (UK)

Recorded
  
late 1972–January 1973 Apple Studio, London; Wally Heider Studios, Los Angeles

Producer
  
Nicky Hopkins, David Briggs

Similar
  
Nicky Hopkins albums, Pop rock albums

Nicky hopkins dreamer


Recording

Having recently completed his duties on the Rolling Stones' "STP tour" of North America, Hopkins began work on his second official solo album in London during September 1972. Sessions took place at the Beatles' old Apple Studio, in short bursts between Hopkins' session work for what would be two major releases of 1973: George Harrison's Living in the Material World and the Stones' Goats Head Soup (the latter's held at Dynamic Sound in Kingston, Jamaica). All the material was written by either Hopkins or in collaboration with singer Jerry Lynn Williams. One of the solo compositions, "Edward", was a short, simplified take on the much-admired "Edward, the Mad Shirt Grinder", from Hopkins' days in Quicksilver Messenger Service (and released on their 1969 album Shady Grove).

Contents

Recording The Tin Man Was a Dreamer is said to have been a "weekend" activity, while the Harrison sessions took place on weekdays. From the Material World line-up, Klaus Voormann played bass on all tracks on the Hopkins album bar the piano-only opener, "Sundown in Mexico"; Harrison contributed lead (mostly slide) guitar to "Banana Anna", "Speed On", "Edward" and "Waiting for the Band"; and Jim Horn augmented the Bobby Keys–Jim Price horn section for "Speed On". Rolling Stone Mick Taylor played rhythm guitar on this last song and handled the guitar parts on "Dolly", "The Dreamer" and "Lawyer's Lament". For these last three tracks, orchestration was later overdubbed by Elton John's arranger, Del Newman. Repaying the favour from earlier in the year when Hopkins' played on his own solo album, Keys also contributed to "Edward", "Speed On", "Banana Anna" and "Pig's Boogie".

Further recording was carried out in Los Angeles, prior to Hopkins' participation in the Rolling Stones' 1973 Far East tour. Following this, during March and April, he again worked with Harrison on the Ringo album, Ravi Shankar's Shankar Family & Friends, and Cheech & Chong's "Basketball Jones featuring Tyrone Shoelaces" – a trio of projects that featured Harrison in the role of, respectively, collaborator, producer and session guest.

Release

The Tin Man Was a Dreamer was issued in April 1973 (delayed until July in Britain) with a brace of singles and a Columbia promotional campaign that posed the question, with reference to the Hopkins' impressive credentials: "After albums with the Airplane, the Who, Jeff Beck, Fats Domino, John Lennon and the Rolling Stones, where can you possibly go?" Hopkins was very much in the music-press headlines at the time, in fact – but, somewhat ironically, more for reasons related to his regular status as sideman rather than through the hoped-for solo success. The first example of this was in March, when he was asked to comment on whether the Ringo Starr sessions in Los Angeles might lead to a Beatles reunion. "All it was," Hopkins said of the Lennon–Harrison–Starr team-up, "was all the people turned up [in the studio], which has happened many times before in England. For example, Ringo worked on George's upcoming album and Harrison helped out on my own forthcoming solo album LP." While he quelled that particular rumour, in the other big story, concerning the Stones – specifically that Keith Richards was set to leave the band – he appeared to have played a different role. As the NME of 9 June would have it: "The story seems to have emanated from LA, where Nicky Hopkins reportedly told a US rock writer that Richards had been ousted by [Mick] Jagger ..."

Reception

Although the album was overshadowed by speculation regarding Hopkins's famous friends and employers, The Tin Man Was a Dreamer attracted positive reviews, and is still well regarded among fans and critics alike.

Bruce Eder of AllMusic describes it as "engagingly edgy pop-rock – picture Elton John's early '70s work with more variety, a few rough edges, and a bit less ego". For Eder, the highlights are many: "Dolly", a "hauntingly beautiful" ballad; the instrumental "Edward"; a "pounding, pumping" rocker called "Speed On"; the "wittily scatological" second single, "Banana Anna"; "Lawyer's Lament" – specifically, its "exquisite harmonies" and Taylor's "sensitive lead playing"; and the "rollicking" closing track "Pig's Boogie", on which Chris Spedding contributed a guitar part.

While reviewing Harrison's contributions, Simon Leng calls the album "a fine collection of idiosyncratic pop songs and Southern hoedown" and identifies the best moments as "Banana Anna" ("a classic – or the classic – of English interpretations of Louisiana boogie"), "Sundown in Mexico" (for its "captivating moodscape"), "Lawyer's Lament", and the "irresistible" jaunt "Edward".

Long out of print, and following a period as a sought-after rarity, The Tin Man Was a Dreamer was issued on CD by Sony Japan in 1995.

Track listing

All songs by Nicky Hopkins, except where noted.

Side one

  1. "Sundown in Mexico" – 1:35
  2. "Waiting for the Band" – 2:15
  3. "Edward" – 5:20
  4. "Dolly" (Hopkins, Jerry Lynn Williams) – 4:42
  5. "Speed On" (Hopkins, Williams) – 3:59

Side two

  1. "The Dreamer" – 5:47
  2. "Banana Anna" (Hopkins, Williams) – 3:37
  3. "Lawyer's Lament" (Hopkins, Williams) – 3:43
  4. "Shout It Out" (Hopkins, Williams) – 3:39
  5. "Pig's Boogie" – 2:42

Personnel

  • Nicky Hopkins – vocals, piano, organ
  • Klaus Voormann – bass
  • Ray Cooper – congas, percussion
  • Prairie Prince – drums
  • Jerry Lynn Williams – vocals
  • George Harrison – electric guitar, slide guitar (credited as George O'Hara)
  • Mick Taylor – electric and acoustic guitars
  • Bobby Keys – saxophones
  • Chris Rea – acoustic guitar
  • Mike Egan – acoustic guitar
  • Chris Spedding – electric guitar
  • Jim Horn – saxophone
  • Jim Price – trumpet
  • Del Newman – string and brass arrangements
  • Songs

    1Sundown in Mexico1:37
    2Waiting for the Band2:16
    3Edward5:20

    References

    The Tin Man Was a Dreamer Wikipedia