Arthur (Or The Decline And Fall Of The British Empire)
About This Album
Arthur (Or the Decline and Fall of the British Empire) extends the British-oriented themes of Village Green Preservation Society, telling the story of a London man's decision to move to Australia during the aftermath of World War II. It's a detailed and loving song cycle, capturing the minutiae of suburban life, the numbing effect of bureaucracy, and the horrors of war. On paper, Arthur sounds like a pretentious mess, but Ray Davies' lyrics and insights have rarely been so graceful or deftly executed, and the music is remarkable. An edgier and harder-rocking affair than Village Green, Arthur is as multi-layered musically as it is lyrically. "Shangri-La" evolves from English folk to hard rock, "Drivin'" has a lazy grace, "Young and Innocent Days" is a lovely, wistful ballad, "Some Mother's Son" is one of the most uncompromising antiwar songs ever recorded, while "Victoria" and "Arthur" rock with simple glee. The music makes the words cut deeper, and the songs never stray too far from the album's subject, making Arthur one of the most effective concept albums in rock history, as well as one of the best and most influential British pop records of its era. [Castle's 1998 CD reissue of Arthur contained ten bonus tracks, including mono and stereo versions of the non-LP singles "Plastic Man," "Mindless Child of Motherhood," and "This Man He Weeps Tonight," mono versions of "Drivin'" and "She's Bought a Hat Like Princess Marina," the B-side "King Kong," and the previously unreleased "Mr. Shoemakers Daughter."] ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Most underated rock band in the history of rock. How profound is the song "Shangri-la"?! One of the greatest rock songs never to see the light of day! What a travesty! Arthur would have been the 1st rock opera in history, produced before the Who's Tommy. Alas the BBC SUITS pulled the plug before the special would have aired on TV in 1969. Thus promotion of the album went down with it. A microcosm of the bad luck that hung over their heads for most of their careers!! Should have been up there wi
NO REVIEW of this album? Are you crackers or something? Well, let me take a crack at an abbreviated one:
It's great...especially this release with the extra tracks (Mindless Child of Motherhood and This Man He Weeps Tonight prove that Dave Davies of 1969 was on a par with George Harrison of 1969). Simply marvy. "Victoria", "Shangri-La", "..Princess Marina", and the loverly "Young And Innocent Days" are all knockouts. Humor? Pathos? Rock? Sweet Sentiment? Mick Avory beating the hell out of his d