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Jewels Were the Stars
 
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Jewels Were the Stars [Box set]

Pearls Before SwineAudio CD
4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Audio CD (March 16, 2006)
  • Number of Discs: 4
  • Format: Box set
  • Note on Boxed Sets: During shipping, discs in boxed sets occasionally become dislodged without damage. Please examine and play these discs. If you are not completely satisfied, we'll refund or replace your purchase.
  • Label: Water
  • ASIN: B00008A7TB
  • Average Customer Review: 4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #390,891 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Disc: 1
1. Footnote
2. Sail Away
3. Look into Her Eyes
4. I Shall Be Released
5. Frog in the Window
See all 14 tracks on this disc
Disc: 2
1. The Jeweler
2. From the Movie of the Same Name
3. Rocket Man
4. God Save the Child
5. Song About a Rose
See all 10 tracks on this disc
Disc: 3
1. Sonnet #65
2. Once Upon a Time
3. Raindrops
4. City of Gold
5. Nancy
See all 11 tracks on this disc
Disc: 4
1. Snow Queen
2. A Life
3. Butterflies
4. Simple Things
5. Everybody's Got Pain
See all 11 tracks on this disc

Editorial Reviews

This box contains 4 Warner/Reprise albums (remastered from the original tapes and released on CD for the first time), 'These Things Too', 'The Use Of Ashes', 'City Of Gold' & 'Beautiful Lies You Could Live In'. Includes a detailed 48-page book with photos

 

Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
5 star:
 (6)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.9 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Pearls Before Swine...the finest underground group of all, April 2, 2003
This review is from: Jewels Were the Stars (Audio CD)
I had not forgotten about Pearls Before Swine, but I had forgotten how much I used to love those records. They were unlike anything else out there in the psychedelic 60's/70's. There was stranger stuff, but it was never this human. There was, perhaps, more tuneful stuff, but it was so sanded off as to be nondescript (next to the Pearls). The Pearls never seemed to be dishing out product, just heartfelt and experimental at once. Tom Rapp wrote what for me were stunning, classic songs which took me to places unknown in pop music. Friends would come by in those heady days and ask to hear "that guy with the lisp", and I never took it as a putdown. This was magical stuff then and it retains all of its 'je ne sais quoi', its strange charm. This collection is available now only through the efforts of dedicated fans; the fact that this collection has very little commercial possibility defines it as a labor of love. Share that love and add this to your cd library: you won't be disappointed. If it only contained "The Jeweler" and "Rocket Man", it would be worth the price of this set.
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17 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Pain and Beauty, April 29, 2003
By 
This review is from: Jewels Were the Stars (Audio CD)
At long last the four Reprise albums by Pearls Before Swine/ Tom Rapp have been released on CD- their absence had been a glaring omission and a reason to keep a turntable.Chances are anyone contemplating buying this 4-CD box is already familiar with Rapp's work (those who are merely curious might want to get the single-CD best-of, Constructive Melancholy, instead), but for those who aren't: Rapp is (along with Leonard Cohen, a major influence) one of the small handful of singer/songwriters whose lyrics actually qualify as poetry. His songs, largely dealing with the loss of faith and innocence and the limitations of love, are set to touchingly pretty, melancholy tunes (Rapp also gives musical settings to poems by Auden, Shakespeare, Yeats and others)and sung in a rasping voice that makes a virtue of its limitations but nonetheless spans an emotional range from tender to desolate. By the time these recording were made Pearls Before Swine as a group was largely a fiction, with the music being played by outstanding session players- largely Nashville players, but this is in no way country music. These are songs to haunt you for a lifetime.

The first two Pearls Before Swine albums command a certain mystique because they were released by the same record label (ESP) as the Fugs and Charles Manson, but in the Reprise period Rapp reaches (and passes) his peak as an artist. Included here are his masterpiece (The Use of Ashes), two superior albums (These Things Too and City of Gold), and the strangely lackluster Beautiful Lies You Could Live In. Not included is Familiar Songs, a collection of unprepossessing demos and rehearsal tapes that Reprise released without Rapp's knowledge or permission, and which he disowns. There are no bonus tracks (not surprisingly, since such tracks would likely be along the same lines as Familiar Songs). The only surprise is on These Things Too, in which the first version of The Frog In the Window is extended beyond the point at which it fades out in the original LP issue. These are short albums and could easily have fit on two CD's, but they retain their distinct flavors by appearing as separate packages, each with its original cover.

The remastering is a vast improvement over the flat-sounding Constructive Melancholy. The set includes a booklet with previously unseen photos and an entertaining and revealing lengthy interview with Rapp. Each album is accompanied by an essay, but these leave something to be desired.Nick Salomen writes, "there is also an underlying religious, though non-secular, feel to much of this album." "Religious though non-secular?" I suspect he meant "non-sectarian," but an editor was needed here. Edwin Pouncey has somehow managed to miss the entire point of "The Jeweler" (the title character is an obvious Christ-figure, complete with stigmata,and the coins he polishes are damaged souls, but Pouncey interprets this as an "almost Old Testament fate his character must suffer for the adoration of money.") And Lenny Kaye's abstruse ramblings are beyond my comprehension (though his heart seems to be in the right place).

But these are minor quibbles. These are records that are an important part of my life. Maybe they'll be part of your life too.

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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Box Set of Rare Jewels That Were Stars, December 27, 2003
By 
Gavin B. (St. Louis MO) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Jewels Were the Stars (Audio CD)
Anytime you pay fifty bucks for a box set by an artist, it begs the question; Is the music within worth the price of admission? I can't tell you how many "deluxe" box sets are gathering dust on my shelf because they are simply repackaged "hits" with a few unlistenable outtakes and alternate takes added to lure a collector. Many record labels have exploited both the artist and consumer by selling us the orginal vinyl issue; then the CD issue; and now the remastered edition of our favorite albums and anthologies. "Jewels Were the Stars" actually offers us something that we haven't heard before. This 4 CD box set helps to complete the puzzle of the Pearls Before Swine's post ESP label work and is the most coveted reissue of 2003 for fans of early psychedelica. The four albums presented in this box set were hard to find, even when they were orginally issued in vinyl.

Pearls Before Swine's first two albums "One Nation Underground" and "Bakalava" have long been available as a import for fans who went to the trouble to purchase them on the internet or mail order, but these four albums have been out of print for nearly 30 years and it shows Pearls Before Swine to have a life well beyond their two classic ESP releases. By 1969, most of the original line up was gone, except for front man Tom Rapp, who persued his brilliant, but often idiosyncratic path, with a variety of musicians. Pearls Before Swine became a "nom de plume" for what was essentially four Tom Rapp solo albums from 1969 until 1971. This lovingly packaged and well presented box set, shows why Tom Rapp's music and poetry have inspired a cult of devoted fans and critics well beyond the lifespan of Pearls Before Swine. PBS is arguably the most under appreciated band that emerged the late sixties counter-invasion of American psychedelic and folk rock bands. The "Jewels Were the Stars" box set is important because it puts closure on the missing legacy of Pearls Before Swine's final four albums.

Tom Rapp went on to University of Pennsylvania in the mid-seventies and became a civil rights attorney in Bucks County Pennsylvania. In 2000 he resurfaced with the critcally acclaimed "Journal of the Plague Year" which revived interest in his music. He currently lives in Florida and does occasional European tours and folk festival work in the USA.

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Jewels Were the Stars is one of Pearls Before Swine's 11 releases.
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