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Paris 1919 (album)

Paris 1919 is the third solo studio album by the Welsh musician John Cale, released on 25 February 1973 by Reprise Records. Musicians such as Lowell George and Wilton Felder performed on the release. It was produced by Chris Thomas, who had previously worked producing Procol Harum.[4]

Paris 1919

25 February 1973 (1973-02-25)

1972–1973

Sunwest (Los Angeles)

31:30

In contrast to the experimental nature of much of John Cale's work before and after Paris 1919, the album is noted for its orchestral-influenced style, reminiscent of contemporary pop rock music.[5][4] Its title is a reference to the 1919 Paris Peace Conference, and song contents explore various aspects of early 20th century Western Europe culture and history.


The album has received critical praise from several publications over the years, including AllMusic and Rolling Stone. It was reissued on 19 June 2006 by Rhino Records.

Recording[edit]

Paris 1919 was recorded in 1972 and 1973 with producer Chris Thomas, and, although musician credits were never given on the album's packaging until the 2006 Rhino expanded CD edition, it features Little Feat members Lowell George on guitar and Richie Hayward on drums, in addition to Wilton Felder of the Crusaders on bass guitar as well as orchestration provided by the UCLA Symphony Orchestra.[6]

Content[edit]

AllMusic considers it the most accessible and traditional of Cale's albums,[5] and the best-known of his work as a solo artist.


Paris 1919 takes its influences from pop and rock artists such as Brian Wilson, the Bee Gees, and Procol Harum, particular the latter band's popular 1972 live album Live in Concert with the Edmonton Symphony Orchestra.[6] Lyrically, Cale recalls possible childhood memories in "Child's Christmas in Wales", whose title is a reference to a prose poem by Dylan Thomas and a reference to Thomas' poem "The Ballad of the Long-Legged Bait" in its second verse. Cale makes cultural and literary references to writer Graham Greene, William Shakespeare's Macbeth (1623), Enoch Powell, Chipping Sodbury, Andalucia, Dunkirk, and Segovia,[6] while "Antarctica Starts Here" is inspired by the 1950 Billy Wilder film Sunset Boulevard starring Gloria Swanson.[7]


The album's title makes reference to the 1919 Paris Peace Conference, an event that established a new partitioning of Europe as well as the assignment of unilateral war reparations. With the event having arguably contributed substantially to the rise of the Third Reich and the emergence of World War II, Cale described the record as "an example of the nicest ways of saying something ugly."[6]

Live performances[edit]

Cale has performed Paris 1919 live in its entirety throughout the world, beginning in Cardiff on 21 November 2009, with his regular band and a 19-piece orchestra, with new orchestral arrangements by Cale and composer Randall Woolf. The show was staged again in 2010 in London, Norwich, Paris, Brescia, Los Angeles, and Melbourne, then in 2011 in Barcelona, Essen, and Malmö, as well as two shows in New York City in January 2013.[18][19][20]

Legacy[edit]

The Wire included Paris 1919 in its list of "100 Records That Set the World on Fire (While No One Was Listening)".[21] In 2016, Uncut ranked Paris 1919 at number 99 in its list of the 200 greatest albums of all time.[22] The album was also featured in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die (2005).[23]


Songs from Paris 1919 have been covered by such notable musicians as Yo La Tengo, Manic Street Preachers frontman James Dean Bradfield, Owen Pallett, David Soldier and the Soldier String Quartet, Love and Rockets' David J, Okkervil River, Jay Bennett and Edward Burch, and Sally Timms.[24]

– vocals, piano, keyboards, viola, acoustic guitar

John Cale

– electric guitar, acoustic guitar

Lowell George

– bass guitar, saxophone

Wilton Felder

– drums

Richie Hayward

– tambourine

Chris Thomas

The UCLA Symphony Orchestra – strings

Joel Druckman, Esq. – orchestra manager

Musicians


Technical

at Discogs (list of releases)

Paris 1919