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11 Reviews
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Harry proved here that he was no sentimentalist,
By
This review is from: Sniper & Other Love Songs (Audio CD)
During the time he was still with us, the rock'n'roll crowd sneered that he didn't have the proper rock "attitude". The folkies felt he was too philosophical and didn't stick to the standard ballad form enough. Fortunately the bona fide folk purists weren't listening anymore because original material had been "in" for folksingers for years, or we'd have heard "where's Jimmy Crack Corn?" ad nauseam. The audience who listened to Carole King and Carly Simon wanted to hear love ballads and Harry wasn't enough of a Neil Diamond clone for their tastes. The Singer/ Songwriter fans complained that his lyrics were too prosaic, too matter-of-fact. But Harry overcame the "sophomore jinx" by giving us more "pay attention, Jack" material than on his "Heads & Tales" debut. From the start, we got some very listenable material. "Sunday Morning Sunshine" is a joyful your-love-gives-my-life-meaning song. Then the album abruptly shifts to the raging epic title song, the tale of Charles Whitman of Texas Tower fame. Given the times this song was written during, Chapin can be forgiven his attempt to understand this monster who didn't realize that the universe underwrites no insurance against hurt feelings to any of us--instead Whitman threw the most fearsome temper tantrum a human being can throw: mass murder. Listen to the lyrics--every slight mentioned has happened to all of us, but the difference is that the rest of us do like the old saying: "get a life". Then the album moves to a song of a lonely musician who finds love in the arms of an abandoned single mom whose "Baby Never Cries". Then to "Burning Herself", the helpless thoughts of a man in love with a woman who's into self-mutilation and he can't think of a thing he can do to help her, and as such he's letting her down. "Better Place To Be" is the tale of a lonely waitress who meets an equally lonely customer in the line of duty. The sequence of "Sunday Morning Sunshine" and "And the Baby Never Cries" bracketing the shock-and-awe "Sniper" isn't a recent development of later editions--I still have the LP of it, which I grabbed when it was first released over 20 years ago. This album is basically Harry saying "bull" to those who called him a wimp and a poor songwriter on strength of his freshman effort. Not to mention those who couldn't fit him into a convenient pigeonhole so decided to sneer at him instead--the sneer being the defalt facial expression of 20th century Americal, a syndrome our society is still sick unto death from. To call him "progressive folk" along with brilliant Texan Shawn Phillips is the closest one can come under mass-market music rules. That's if those really apply. Which they don't--this is Harry Chapin Music you're buying here. That's the name of the category.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
some dark love songs,
By aaron neubauer (corpus christi, tx) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Sniper & Other Love Songs (Audio CD)
I have waited for 10 years for sniper and other love songs to be released on cd. The album is very dark, typified by "Sniper", and "Woman Child". The album features the Chapin anthem "Circle" and Harry's favorites song that he wrote "A Better Place" to be. Over all a very good album. aaron neubauer
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Heavy songs that are nice to know,
By
This review is from: Sniper & Other Love Songs (Audio CD)
Steve Chapin plays piano for his brother Harry Chapin on the album "Sniper and Other Love Songs" released in 1972. With Tim Scott on cello, Ron Palmer on lead guitar, John Wallace on electric bass, and Harry Chapin with his own guitar, the group always has plenty of irons in the fire to add to the astounding lyrics of Harry Chapin. The first song brags about having "a pocket full of stories that I just had to tell." On the dramatic side, this album is named for a song called "Sniper" that is 9 minutes and 50 seconds long, ("Seven A.M., the day is beginning, so much to do and so little time") that tells a story which starts with a tower on a campus. By the middle of the song, the main character is spewing out "Are you listening to me? Are you listening to me? Am I?" as the bullets fly. "Not much of a joiner" was the explanation people gave for his idiosyncrasies.
The song "Circle" has a 1971 copyright, and the "let's go 'round one more time" theme is just right for a career in music. The best song with a "Sshh, I know just how you feel" line is "Better Place to Be," which takes 7 minutes and thirty-five seconds to answer the question: Where the hell you been hiding, and why do you look so down? The long story keeps turning into a chorus when it gets to: If you want me to come with you then that's alright with me 'cause I know I'm going nowhere and anywhere's a better place to be.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Genius storyteller,
By
This review is from: Sniper & Other Love Songs (Audio CD)
Sniper and Other Love Songs is easily one of Harry Chapins best albums, with it's title track (Sniper) ranking up there as one of his best works. No one could put a story to music like Harry and it's about the time they started releasing more of his work on CD. Listen to the CD, then take the time to REALLY listen to it. I promise you'll be moved!
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Chapin's Best Collection is Finally Here,
By
This review is from: Sniper & Other Love Songs (Audio CD)
Many folks will disagree with me, but "Sniper and Other Love Songs", is, in my opinion, Harry's best album. This collection is a touch melancholy, perhaps, but poignant all the same. I am mystified as to why all of his other albums were released on CD, and Sniper languished for years before they finally released it. The sound quality is great, though, and the price is right. A must buy for anyone who appreciates the story-songs of Mr. Chapin.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Chapin RAW - his most affecting album. I'd give it a 10.,
By
This review is from: Sniper & Other Love Songs (Audio CD)
This is Chapin's strongest album, but it's not for everyone -- "Sniper" and "A Better Place to Be" are about the rawest, most emotional works I've ever heard. "Sniper" is in fact a love song, but it's a look into an an awfully strange world view.
If you like "Heads & Tails," give this one a try, but be ready for a visceral experience. I went almost 10 years between listenings at one point, and remembered every song almost word for word. You don't have that kind of recall if material is just goop. This is a real artistic roller coaster.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The magnificent Harry Chapin,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Sniper & Other Love Songs (Audio CD)
My first date with my wife-to-be, was to see Harry play in Gainesville, FL. We were crushed when he was killed in the car crash. This man has left a wonderful legacy. To see him play live was inspirational. We love him to this day.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great,
By A Customer
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Sniper & Other Love Songs (Audio CD)
All of Harry Chapins music is great. I have all his recordings on record albums and all that is available on CD. I cannot understand why all of Harrys music is not on CD. No one has been able to put a story to song like him. I was fortunate to see him once and I will never forget it.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Different kind of Chapin album,
This review is from: Sniper & Other Love Songs (Audio CD)
The melancholy, sometimes disturbing, but always beautiful "Sniper and Other Love Songs" is, as the title implies, a collection of songs that celebrate life and death, love and hate, and other contrasts. Originally called "City Suite", which is shown by the beautiful cover art of the album, it has three of his biggest hits, "Sunday Morning Sunshine", "Circle", and "A Better Place to Be", and of course his title opus, an epic about a sniper going on a wild rampage, that remains one of his more disturbing songs. Also worth mentioning, though, are "The Baby Never Cries", "Burning Herself", about an old girlfriend of Harry's that used to burn herself with her cigarettes", the soulful "Barefoot Boy", the darker "Woman Child", and the beautiful"Winter Song". Eleckra recently released this is a double album with "Heads and Tails", with additional tracks never released included and an extended cut of "Barefoot Boy", which is highly recommended. His hardest hitting album, though. For easier listening music, I recommend "Short Stories".
4.0 out of 5 stars
One little thing,
By
This review is from: Sniper & Other Love Songs (Audio CD)
Here's classic Harry Chapin, the way he'll be heard for the next thousand years or so. But, there's this little thing that nags me. 'Barefoot lady'? No! The songs called 'Barefoot Boy'. It's a piece I helped an old girlfriend do for a school project, using a slide projector and a turntable. ( OK, I'm old, stuff happens) I do wish the printer will see this and correct it.
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Sniper & Other Love Songs by Harry Chapin (Audio CD - 2002)
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