Cat Stevens – Tea For The Tillerman Live 1971 (Umbrella PAL DVD) + Tea For The Tillerman + Teaser
& The Firecat (Universal Music Deluxe Edition CD Sets)
Picture: C+ Sound: C/B- Extras: C/B-/B- Concert: C+ Albums:
B-
PLEASE NOTE: While the CDs will play
anywhere, the DVD can only be operated on machines capable of playing back DVDs
that can handle Region Zero/0 PAL format software and can be ordered from our
friends at Umbrella Entertainment at the website address provided at the end of
the review.
The
singer now know as Yusuf and was born Steven Georgiou is still best known as
Cat Stevens. From 1971 to 1979, he had a
great run as a major singer/songwriter before converting to Islam and
abandoning Pop Music for a long time to come.
It is hard to believe his peaceful, quiet music would give way to
charges of funding terrorist groups while making extremely graphic comments
about how Salman Rushdie should be treated (i.e., mutilated), but my, how times
change. Some new reissues of material
from Stevens peak (an early one) have been issued on DVD and CD, reminding us
how good and interesting things once were.
The big
breakthrough album as one of the many artists at the very artist-friendly
A&M Records was Tea For The
Tillerman, a big hit that included the big single “Wild World” and radio favorites like “Hard Headed Woman” and the title song. With the release of his next album, hitting
stores by the end of the year, he taped a concert for public TV for KCET in Los
Angeles (Taylor Hackford was a producer) and it only upped his popularity. It is being released in Australia as Tea For The Tillerman Live and the
follow-up album Teaser & The Firecat
would have even more hits and chart higher.
Universal
Music has issued both albums in their always welcome Deluxe Edition CD sets,
all of which give us a look at Stevens when he was great and the decline that
followed via bonus tracks. Sure, he
still has the voice, but the energy and spirit are asleep, permanently. Here are the tracks for each release:
Tea For The Tillerman Live 1971:
Moonshadow
On The Road To Find Out
Where Do the Children Play?
Wild World
Miles From Nowhere
Longer Boats
Father & Son
Hard Headed Woman
Tea For The Tillerman
Disc
One:
Where Do the Children Play?
Hard Headed Woman
Wild World
Sad Lisa
Miles From Nowhere
But I Might Die Tonight
Longer Boats
Into White
On The Road To Find Out
Father & Son
Hard Headed Woman
Tea For The Tillerman
Disc
Two:
Wild World (Demo Version)
Longer Boats (Live At The Troubadour)
Into White (Live At The Troubadour)
Miles From Nowhere (Demo Version)
Hard Headed Woman (Live In Japan)
Where Do the Children Play? (from the Majikat Earth Tour)
Sad Lisa (from the Majikat Earth Tour)
On The Road To Find Out (Live at KCET-TV)
Father & Son (from Yusuf’s Café)
Wild World (from Yusuf’s Café)
Tea For The Tillerman (Live at the BBC)
Teaser & The Firecat
Disc
One:
The Wind
Rubylove
If I Laugh
Changes IV
How Can I Tell You
Tuesday’s Dead
Morning Has Broken
Bitterblue
Moonshadow
Peace Train
Disc
Two:
Moonshadow (Live At The Troubadour)
Rubylove (Demo Version)
If I Laugh (Demo Version)
Changes IV (Demo Version)
How Can I Tell You (Demo Version)
Morning Has Broken (Demo Version)
Bitterblue (Live at Royal Albert Hall)
Tuesday’s Dead (from the Majikat Earth Tour)
Peace Train (Live at Royal Albert Hall 2003)
The Wind (from Yusuf’s Café)
The
second album sported the hits “Moonshadow”,
“Peace Train” and “Morning Has Broken” but even on the
basis of those songs, something was amiss.
The songs stayed simpler than other singer/songwriter releases and
instead of a building up that the likes of a Carly Simon or Elton John was
showing with each album, Stevens seemed more like he was ready to be a guest on
Sesame Street and Moonshadow is
particularly infamous. Then, it was a
UFO (i.e., what is that song about) though the happy acceptance of various body
parts being removed/chopped off/lost may have been misinterpreted as
existential (one writer said it was about accepting defeat after Kent State!),
the truth is it reflects severe Muslim punishments, now all the darker with
recent revelations and controversies. An
animated film was even made to promote the song and Firecat album, actually included on the DVD here.
His music
was also prominent in the Hal Ashby classic Harold & Maude (1971) about a teen and senior citizen falling
in love. For 1971, Cat Stevens was
considered a voice of the counterculture, but those fans would now consider him
a sellout and disappointment. It
certainly feels that way in the bonus tracks of newer recordings where he
changes the songs for the worst. The
golden moment is dead and gone, but with these releases, you can relive how
good (even maybe great) they once were.
Ah, nostalgia.
The 1.33
x 1 image on the PAL DVD is not bad for an old show shot in then-professional
analog NTSC video, but is not the best NTSC form the period we have seen on
DVD. Still, it looks goods for its
age. The Dolby Digital 2.0 sound on the
DVD is monophonic, but the good thing is that one of the tracks appear on the
bonus discs of the first CD, with “On The
Road To Find Out” and it does sound better than the DVD. The PCM 2.0 16/44.1 Stereo on the albums
sound fine (the Mobile Fidelity Gold CDs are long out of print) and the sound
on the bonus CDs are stereo for the most part, so the quality is good, but
there does tend to be some distortion at some points on the original albums I
have never heard before on previous copies of those releases. Extras are plentiful on the CD sets with the
bonus discs and the usual booklets rich with stills and details about the
album. The DVD offers that animated film
without the opening or closing being dropped as it has been in some MTV-era
broadcast.
The
release of all this so close was so interesting, I though if Paramount might
suddenly issue Harold & Maude on
Blu-ray, but that was not the case. You
can read more about Eagle’s release of the Majikat
Earth Tour 1976 at this link:
http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/1254/Cat+Stevens+-+Majikat+Earth+Tour
As noted above, while the CDs are U.S. releases and
readily available widely, you can order the PAL DVD import exclusively from
Umbrella at:
http://www.umbrellaent.com.au/
- Nicholas Sheffo