Articles
News
Music
Photography
Video
Stories
Buy
Links
Miscellaneous
Do Something
Circle!
Mailing List
Message Board
maintained by:
Brian
leave your thoughts/ tribute to Harry:
check out the guestbook
|
Home
> News >
Chapin Archive Starts Petition to Release Legends On CD
Chapin Archive Starts Petition to Release Legends On CD
February 12, 2001
Today, HarryChapin.com announces a new Petition to Release Legends of
the Lost and Found on CD. Fans have asked Elektra for years to re-release this
excellent album on CD, with no luck.
Perhaps an online petition, with all joining forces, will motivate Elektra to release Legends on CD.
As webmaster, I receive several requests regularly for information about the availability of
Legends on CD. (My only response can be: it isn't available on CD, period.)
A great purchasing audience is out there for the album on CD; perhaps together we can make Elektra recognize that.
Layout, design, images, and user-contributed text are © Copyright 1996-2009 HarryChapin.com: The Harry Chapin Archive.
"Oh, if a man tried to take his time on earth and prove before he died what one man's life could be worth, I wonder what would happen to this world?" -- Harry Chapin, 1942-1981.
|
|
The Latest Release
|
Sniper & Other Love Songs
[iTunes]
In 1972, Harry released
Sniper & Other Love Songs.
Thirty years would pass before the album would ever reach the CD format. Sniper was finally re-released in June, 2002.
Originally given a working title of Sweet City Suite, the album tells the story of various characters one might run into in
a city. The album features the original studio versions of Chapin classics "A Better Place to Be" and "Circle." But
perhaps more importantly (as those songs are already well-distributed on compilation CDs), the album features seemingly
lost Chapin stories, including "And the Baby Never Cries," "Burning Herself," "Barefoot Boy," and "Woman Child."
Sniper is for the seasoned Chapin fan. New fans would do better to check out
Greatest Stories
Live. But for Chapin fans who have reached the level of the
Dance Band on the Titanic album, this is the next step. Slightly over-produced and having a little of the "forced"
feel that some of Harry's studio albums possess, this album does not capture the powerfully live Harry Chapin. Nonetheless,
it captures Harry's great iconoclastic songwriting--Harry takes the story song to new heights here. But the album works best
for those ready for it; don't buy it until you are ready to appreciate it!
|
|
|