Sunday, December 27, 2020

Steve Howe - ...and on guitar (1991)

In April 1970, Steve Howe replaced Peter Banks in Yes, and his career really started to take off. His playing style soon became instantly recognisable, and he has since become an integral part of the band, playing on every album from 1971's 'The Yes Album' until the band split up in 1981. While he was still finding his feet in Yes, Howe and Rick Wakeman contributed to the recording of Lou Reed's self-titled debut album as session musicians, working together for the first time, and the same year he had played lead guitar on folk duo Curtiss Maldoon's first eponymous album. A couple of years later he played on two instrumental albums, one by his band-mate Rick Wakeman on his first solo records, and also on an album by Johnny Harris, who recorded easy listening versions of popular hits of the the 60's and 70's. It was rather an odd gig, but his contribution to Jethro Tull's 'Love Song' was professional if nothing else. In 1975 the members of Yes took a break to record solo albums, and as well as releasing his own superb 'Beginnings', Howe also found time to help out Yes drummer Alan White with his own solo album, playing on a song to which Jon Anderson also contributed vocals. After that there was a busy seven year period with Yes which meant that he couldn't moonlight on other artist's records, but in 1982 he was asked to play on a song from the The Dregs 'Industry Standard' album, after which guest appearances tended to be spaced out at one every few years, appearing on albums by Propaganda, Billie Currie, Andy Leek and Animal Magic in the mid to late 80's. One particularly fine effort is to be found on the first 'Guitar Speak' compilation album from 1988, where guitarists were invited to contribute one piece of music each, and his 'Sharp On Attack' is one of the best pieces on there. In 1991 Queen invited Howe to listen to rough mixes of their new album, and asked if he'd like to add something to the title track 'Innuendo', to which he readily agreed. He has since said that he was proud to have played his classical guitar solo on the song, and as it was his last guest appearance for seven years, it's the perfect conclusion to the album. One appearance that I've had to omit was his acoustic guitar solo on Frankie Goes To Hollywood's 'Welcome To The Pleasuredome' album, as it was unfortunately just too long to fit on here, but it's another example of the fact that unlike a lot of guitarists in this series who tended to stick to the genre that they were most know for, Howe seemed to have no qualms about playing on records by folk, pop, easy listening, rock, or 80's indie artists, adding something special to each record that he played on.   



Track listing

01 Long Long Time (from 'Curtiss Maldoon' by Curtiss Maldoon 1971)  
02 Berlin (from 'Lou Reed' by Lou Reed 1972)
03 Love Song (from 'All To Bring You Morning' by Johnny Harris 1973) 
04 Catherine Of Aragon (from 'The Six Wives Of Henry VIII' by Rick Wakeman 1973)
05 Song Of Innocence (from 'Ramshackled' by Alan White 1975)
06 Up In The Air (from 'Industry Standard' by The Dregs 1982)
07 The Murder Of Love (from 'A Secret Wish' by Propaganda 1985)
08 Airlift (from 'Transportation' by Billie Currie 1988)
09 Sharp On Attack (from the compilation album 'Guitar Speak' 1988) 
10 Say Something (from 'Say Something' by Andy Leek 1988)
11 There's A Spy (In The House Of Love) (from 'Animal Logic' by Animal Logic 1989)  
12 Innuendo (from 'Innuendo' by Queen 1991)


7 comments:

  1. Thank you so much for this... much appreciated. I enjoy this series and look forward to each new post. Any chance you could post separately Steve's acoustic guitar solo on Frankie Goes To Hollywood's 'Welcome To The Pleasuredome' album? Thanks either way. Burt

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  2. Here's the FGTH track, which as I said is very long at over thirteen minutes, and Steve's solo can be found at around 9:20, and only lasts for about 30 seconds. That's the main reason I left it off, but if you want to slot it into the album I've tagged it as track 12. https://yadi.sk/d/0UQpRLm2oiVyCg

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  3. I'm a bit surprised you featured a Howe solo track, and not Queen's "Innuendo."

    I mean, you HAVE included some well-known guest spots in some of these collections (like David Gilmour on "No More Lonely Nights," George Harrison on "Badge," Mark Knopfler on "Gotta Serve Somebody"... I mean, he produced that whole album after all...)

    Also, thinking about it, you could probably get a third American guitarist for this in Todd Rundgren. He produced a ton of albums and likely played guitar on them as well. I know for certain his guitar work is all over "Bat Out of Hell," for example.

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  4. I did think about whether to include the 'Guitar Speak' track or not, but then decided that as it wasn't on a Howe solo or band album, and he had been invited to contribute his guitar to it by I.R.S. Records, then it still counted as a 'guest appearance', so I left it on. The Queen track missed out only because I already had a 47 minute album by the time i'd reached 1989, and like the Frankie Goes To Hollywood track, it would have made it a little unwieldy to include it. Perhaps I should have, as it was his last guest appearance for quite a while and so would bring the album to a nice conclusion. With that in mind I've added it to the running order so that we now have every guest appearance of his up to 1998. Regarding Rundgren, as you should know, I'm a massive fan, and so an album from him is on the cards.

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    Replies
    1. Awesome! I'm definitely looking forward to the Rundgren one!

      And yeah, I figured a 53/54-ish minute album WOULD be a bit long, there still were LPs that came out to that length. It feels cool to have influenced the track list with my suggestion!

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  5. Thought you might dig this article:https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-features/steve-howe-interview-songs-without-yes-1028737/

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