We are also on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter!
 

Radio Schedule



Support our band and online radio!


Via PayPal

 

 

 

Showing posts with label Eric Woolfson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eric Woolfson. Show all posts

Sunday, April 24, 2011









Freudiana (EMI, 1990)





Freudiana es un capítulo aparte en la extensa discografía de Alan Parsons como productor. Supuestamente iba a ser el próximo álbum del Alan Parsons Project después de Gaudi, pero Eric Woolfson, compositor y vocalista del grupo, había planeado algo más introspectivo y diferente: la realización de un álbum que eventualmente evolucione en un musical sobre la vida y obra de Sigmund Freud.




No llevaría el nombre de Alan Parsons Project. Esta vez, sería un album solista de Eric Woolfson como compositor y principal artífice de una obra tridimensional, para ser interpretada en vivo. El Alan Parsons Project se había "terminado”, aunque la banda de Freudiana es la misma que la de Gaudi y, como todo álbum “Project”, contiene vocalistas para todos los gustos incluyendo a Kiki Dee, John Miles y hasta al gran Leo Sayer. Parsons produjo el disco con la misma mano firme y ojo clínico con los que produjo trabajos como Year Of The Cat de Al Stewart o Rebel de Miles. Esta vez Eric Woolfson era su cliente, y Parsons le ayudaría a construir una obra maestra.





El psicoanálisis teórico y los personajes que fueron examinados por Sigmund Freud son sólo un pretexto para Woolfson. Esta vez, por primera vez, presenta un grupo de canciones sobre él mismo y sobre sus propios traumas, demonios y pasiones. El fantasma del gran psiquiatra está al lado de Woolfson al cual imaginamos echado en un diván contándole sus sueños más íntimos. La mente del compositor se abre como una caja de pandora y nos encontramos con diecisiete composiciones suyas extremadamente personales. Parecen canciones que confiesan los sueños y fantasías de los pacientes de Freud, claro, pero en verdad un compositor nunca escribe sobre nadie más excepto sí mismo (aunque Paul McCartney lo puede negar inútilmente con "She Loves You" o "She's Leaving Home) y si Woolfson se había estado aburriendo previamente con el Alan Parsons Project escribiendo canciones sobre robots o un arquitecto catalán; esta vez los retos de analizarse a sí mismo frente a un estudio de grabación y, más retador aún, de presentar un musical sobre el psicoanálisis, lo excitaban y aterraban terriblemente cual sueño erótico.





Lo interesante de los sueños es que uno nunca sabe con qué se va a encontrar mientras divaga por los mil recovecos de la mente. Freud trató de dar una explicación lógica basada en nuestra propia biología y todo lo conectó con el sexo: Edipo, Electra, envidia al pene y horror a la castración fueron constantes en su contribución a la psicología, y fue burlado y reverenciado en su tiempo por presentar ideas tan avanzadas. ¡El Alan Parsons Project también! ¿No fue acaso vilipendeado injustamente por Eve y con toda razón por Stereotomy? No solo eso, el mismo Eric Woolfson fue restringido a no cantar sus propias composiciones hasta el quinto disco del grupo, The Turn Of A Friendly Card. Freud, Parsons y Woolfson son tres barbones con brillantes e innovativas ideas que vieron ambas caras de la moneda en lo que respecta a aceptación.





Pero con temas como “Little Hans” (el paciente más joven del doctor Freud) uno se da cuenta que, para comenzar, es un tema de puta madre (opine aquí sobre los paralelos con las teorías de Freud) y, oh caray, es un profundo y a la vez inocente análisis sobre el desarrollo sexual en el infante masculino. Tiene algo de “Penny Lane” y “A Little Help From My Friends” de los Beatles, que también fueron dos temas sobre la infancia y el crecer rodeado de puntadas de connotación sexual.

















Freudiana, de haber llevado en la carátula el título de Alan Parsons Project, hubiera sido considerado la obra maestra del grupo. Es, sin embargo, un producto producido por Parsons pero dirigido por Eric Woolfson, quien se desligó por completo del productor y, lamentablemente, no se juntaron jamás. Woolfson murió de cáncer en diciembre del 2009 y fue toda una sorpresa y tragedia para nosotros.



Se supo muy poco del disco en los Estados Unidos y muchos fans de Parsons no lo conocen. Habrá sido quizás por la idea de que se trataba de un musical y no se pudo vender apropiadamente como un híbrido entre éste y un álbum conceptual de rock progresivo. "Sects Therapy", una fanfarria graciosa para el hombre común que desconoce las intenciones de Freud, claramente muestra que el disco estaba diseñado para un escenario iluminado, en un teatro oscuro. "Funny You Should Say That" tiene todo el gusto de un final de primer acto estremecedor.





Hora de conocerlo y de psicoanalizarlo. Al disco, y al yo interior de cada uno de ustedes. Lo van a adorar. El disco está descatalogado en Estados Unidos y en Europa, pero en Amazon se puede encontrar usado y muchos temas del disco están disponibles en YouTube.


Friday, December 4, 2009




Eric Woolfson has died and my musical world is suddenly smaller. I feel sad, shocked and surprised. I couldn't believe it when I found out about this after somebody mentioned it in comment entry of one of the sites I visit (Luis Guadalupe's Royal Trilogy). I was shocked and saddened on that winter morning.





I've written a lot about him and his work with the Alan Parsons Project all over this website. It would be very redundant to write about his work. Here are two recent entries about him. They're in Spanish:





  • The Alan Parsons Project Remastered Catalog: http://www.cacaorock.com/2009/08/standing-on-higher-ground.html


  • Eric Woolfson's Freudiana: http://www.cacaorock.com/2009/11/kentucky-freud-chicken-pink-freud.html 




The Alan Parsons Project was one of the first rock bands I took and made my own. It was my personal favorite, along with Police, Pink Floyd and Emerson Lake & Palmer. This back in 1989, when music was starting for me and everything seemed to change dramatically, in me and around me. It was a good year for the world because lots of things were also changing, and it seems it was for the good. It was a good year for me because I discovered the Parsons sound and at the same time I discovered who I was supposed to be in the future. To say that Woolfson and Parsons were my teachers might be an understatement. They lived with me and I learned to be who I wanted to be thanks in part because of their records.













Eric Woolfson sang about time, friends that come and go, unrequited love, requited love and passion for the arts. He loved to explore works of art of famous writers, thinkers and even architects. He was a songwriter, keyboardist and vocalist who penned, with Alan Parsons, all the tunes of the Alan Parsons Project. Their songwriter-manager/producer collaboration started with 1976's Tales Of Mystery And Imagination (a musical flash of Edgar Allan Poe) and ended with 1990's Freudiana (Eric's own Psychoanalisis mirroring Freud's work). Eric went into musical theater and earned quite success in Germany, Austria and South Korea.





I still think that "Time" is one of the best songs ever recorded in popular music history, and I'm glad to have found that "Limelight" was Eric Woolfson's personal call to become a household name in musical theatre (see Alan Parsons' statement below.) That song sounds in my head every time I'm about to try to accomplish something.





From the Alan Parsons Project official website: http://www.alanparsonsmusic.com/






Eric Woolfson, the co-founder, songwriter and manager of The Alan Parsons Project has died at his home in London. He was 64. He had been suffering with cancer for a number of years.





Alan Parsons has issued the following statement:






"I knew of Eric's illness, but bravely, he always asked that it not be made public."






"Eric was one of the most generous, musically gifted and knowledgeable people I ever met. He was also - and I mean no disrespect - the most stubborn individual to set foot on the planet - a trait which made him a great businessman."






"His songwriting talent speaks for itself. He not only wrote the majority of the songs we recorded together but after we had two or three albums under our belts he proved - contrary to my own opinions - that he had a singing voice that would be loved by millions. He never let me forget that I actually disliked Eye In The Sky when he first played it to me - arguably my most famous mistake."






"One newspaper rather cruelly, but nevertheless to Eric's amusement, referred to him as 'The Songwriting Accountant'. It was also once said that in his music business dealings he managed to achieve the sale of the Eiffel tower and then having done it, sold it again."






"It is a regret to me that after 15 years of million-selling successes, that his decision to step from the shadows and into the limelight for his first real solo moment of musical glory - Freudiana - was so plagued with personal conflicts with his business partners. Ultimately and sadly, Freudiana was the last occasion we worked together. Speaking of Limelight - my favourite song of Eric's - was according to him no reflection on his own reaction to stardom or the lack of it. But anyone who knew him will surely agree that upon hearing Limelight's lyrics that there is a message about his feelings in his chosen profession."






"The hiccup that the Freudiana debacle caused, fortunately had no long-lasting effect and he continued in musical theatre with notable success, particularly in Germany, Austria and the Far East."






"I look back upon our times together making The Alan Parsons Projects very fondly. The legacy that Eric created as half of The Alan Parsons Project lived on with a lasting power few artists have ever enjoyed - and I will always be grateful for that."





I also will always be grateful for Eric's music. For his work made me.













Eric's Facebook page:





http://www.facebook.com/EricWoolfson?v=wall&viewas=1806172376

Disclaimer

This is not your common radio station and we're 100% sure you won't find anything like this anywhere else. CacaoRock Online Radio is a non profit online radio station.

Copyright Disclaimer under Section 107 of the copyright act 1976, allowance is made for fair use for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.