The Unauthorised Breakfast Item
|
| List Price: | £15.99 |
| Price: | £12.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery on orders over £15. Details |
Availability: In stock soon. Order now to get in line. First come, first served.
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk
13 new or used available from £5.00
Average customer review:Track Listing
- Smoking Gun (Right For Me)
- Revenge
- Unauthorised Breakfast Item
- Tell Me Why
- It's Getting A Whole Lot Better
- Head Above The Clouds
- Straight Through The Heart
- Wild West Street
- Nowhere To Hide
- Linders Field
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #80154 in Music
- Released on: 2003-09-27
- Number of discs: 1
Customer Reviews
Magnificent Caravan at their very best
It's Christmas night and I'm listening to one of my CD gifts for the third time today. This is vintage Caravan brought up to date with the addition of tremendous guitar work by Doug Boyle - now sadly departed, complemented by old and new favourites in Geoff Richardson, Jim Leverton et al.
Buy this record - if you're already into Caravan you'll love it. If you're just coming across them this is a quality band who have truly stood the test of time - and for all the right reasons! Why this band is not recognised alongside other rock greats I 'll never know.
Caravan at their best
I have only this year caught up with this 2003 release of Caravan's but am very pleased that I did so as it is a splendid record! In fact, I would go so far as to say that "The Unauthorised Breakfast Item" is on a par with their best records from those halcyon days of the 70s, "If I Could Do It All Over Again I'd Do It All Over You", "In the Land of Grey and Pink" and "For Girls Who Grow Plump in the Night".
The sound and feel of this record are very much of Caravan at their best. It is perhaps a bit poppier than those early masterpieces but when that is only an element of the sound in a pop-rock-jazz-progressive mix then it is no bad thing to have. Compared with the landmark "Canterbury Sound" of those early albums, Caravan have added an extra aural texture in the form of Doug Boyle's lead guitar playing: it is added so skilfully that it merges in seamlessly and enhances the band's hallmark soundscape. Many of the musicians responsible for creating Caravan's soundscape feature on this fine record: Pye Hastings, in such wonderful voice; Geoffrey Richardson's viola; Jimmy Hastings's sax and flute; Jan Schelhaas and Dave Sinclair's keyboards; Richard Coughlan's drumming. As such, it should be a very enjoyable record for anyone who enjoyed the band in the 70s.
Of the 10 songs on the album, two are instrumentals and both are gorgeous - Doug Boyle's "Linders Field" closes the album in fine style whilst Geoffrey Richardson's "Wild West Street" acts as a very natural prelude to Dave Sinclair's "Nowhere to Hide", one of the album's highlights (sung beautifully by Jim Leverton, the only time that Pye relinquishes the lead vocal spotlight).
Even on the non-instrumental numbers there are lengthy passages of instrumental music, beautifully conceived in the best Caravan style. Whilst the whole of the album is excellent the highlights that I would pick out (in addition to the three above) would be the pacey opener "Smoking Gun (Right for Me)", the slower tempo "Tell Me Why" with Jim Hastings's sweet sax contribution, another Jimmy Hastings influenced song, "It's Getting a Whole Lot Better" and "Head Above the Clouds" which picks up the pace nicely from the preceding two.
I can see myself playing this album often!
Definately on the Menu
A really super album with thoughtful lyrics and versatile backing. I bought this after hearing them play live.Track 5 is particularly beautiful and worth putting on loop if you need to relax or chillout. It is reminiscent of the music of Penguin Cafe by Simon Jeffes for whom Geoffery Richardson played. Track 8 also has the same feel but more so and quite haunting. He clearly wants the thread to live on. The same mood begins track 6 but it soon bursts into a more lively toe tapping rhythm. They are indeed a talented mix of musicians and Pye's voice clearly sings the catchy lyrics. I am a "born again Caravan fan".
Overall it is a refreshing CD with a hints of the sixties, jazz and rock with a smattering of classical tones, but just incase you start to feel sleepy, bars of jazz wake you up. Get to a concert if you can. It is worth it, but until then, buy the CD. It is a real treat.




