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1975 studio album by Mickey Newbury From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lovers is the 1975 album by singer-songwriter Mickey Newbury. The album is noted for the inclusion of the epic trilogy "Apples Dipped In Candy" and the title track. It was his final release on Elektra Records. Chet Atkins played guitar on "Apples Dipped in Candy" and Bergen White arranged the strings on the album.
Lovers | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 1975 | |||
Recorded | 1975 | |||
Studio | Young 'Un Sound (Murfreesboro, Tennessee) | |||
Genre | Country | |||
Label | Elektra | |||
Producer | Chip Young | |||
Mickey Newbury chronology | ||||
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Lovers was collected for CD issue on the eight-disc Mickey Newbury Collection from Mountain Retreat, Newbury's own label in the mid-1990s, along with nine other Newbury albums from 1969-1981.
The period leading up to the recording of Lovers was not a good one for Newbury; his father had suffered a stroke, he had endured painful back surgery and had been hospitalized for pneumonia, and he was drinking heavily.[3] AllMusic's Tom Jurek, who compares the album to Frank Sinatra's In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning, writes, "It's as if he's trying, through hard country, blues, gospel, R&B, lounge jazz, folk balladry, and even rock, to plead, beg, borrow, and scheme his way (apparently unsuccessfully) from under the bleak cloud that surrounds him."[This quote needs a citation] The album was produced by Chip Young, who had helmed Newbury's previous release I Came to Hear the Music, and was recorded at Youngun Sound Studios in Murfreesboro, Tennessee. Although primarily recognized as a country singer and songwriter, Newbury stocked Lovers with a plethora of musical styles, including blues ("You've Always Got the Blues"), gospel ("Lead On") and heartfelt balladry ("Lovers", "Goodnight"). The title track's evocative line, "To think they once tore down a wall for a door" was inspired, by songwriter Hank Cochran, who lived in an adjoining apartment to country singer Jeannie Seely and, having grown tired of going into the hall to knock on her door, cut a hole through the wall with a chainsaw.[4] Newbury continued to mine new territory, especially for country music, by including a drum solo on "Let Me Sleep." In his Omaha Rainbow interview, Newbury stated that "Apples Dipped in Candy "was a reminiscent kind of thing, going into those kind of songs you hear on the riverboats. Kind of a blues, New Orleans feel."[This quote needs a citation]
The album marked the end of Newbury's remarkable artistic run with Elektra. Peter Blackstock of No Depression proclaims the early seventies "was a fertile time for budding songwriters, and Newbury was the best."[This quote needs a citation]
Lovers peaked at #172 on the Billboard albums chart.[5] AllMusic: "Given the sadness, melancholy, and even grief expressed on his earlier recordings, Newbury's familiarity with the shadow side of the soul is well-known, but none of his recordings cuts such a deep furrow into pain, pessimism, heartbreak, and futile longing as Lovers."[This quote needs a citation]
All tracks composed by Mickey Newbury
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