LET’S STICK TOGETHER – History Tab

Released: 3rd September 2013
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The iconic is generally the result of a conflation of public perception with perfect timing, and these are both factors that loom large in Bryan Ferry’s third solo album, Let’s Stick Together, released in September 1976. With Roxy Music on hiatus, that Ferry’s solo career should come under increasingly intense scrutiny was only natural. However, what has forever sealed the reputation of this throwaway masterpiece is that under this watchful gaze he produced his most loved and accessible pop song (in the peerless title track that opens this record), anchored to a promotional video that defined effortless elegance and undoubtedly fostered most of the aesthetic ideals of the coming decade. Not only was his place in the pop firmament firmly established, but also the image that would come to define him as an artist in the general consciousness – the Lounge Lizard.

The album itself breaks with some of the traditional tropes set forth on the first two releases (no Dylan cover, for instance), a corollary of it’s meting-pot assemblage – a combination of b-sides, singles and an EP. Nonetheless, it retains a very cohesive sound that is instantly recognisable to fans of those earlier LPs, thanks largely to the retention of the previous album’s rhythm section of John Wetton and Paul Thompson, not to mention the revolving cast of Roxy regulars past-and-future (Chris Spedding, David O’List and Phil Manzanera, to mention just the guitarists). Within this setting, Ferry re-imagines a typically wide-ranging cast of covers (pre-LSD Beatles, enigmatic 30’s Jazz, American R&B), but also adds a twist: new treatments of the Roxy Music back catalogue. It is in these re-models of the earlier Roxy songs that Ferry truly reveals the soul stylist that always lurked beneath the studio fireworks.

Following on from the hip-shaking album opener, the version of ‘Casanova’ (from Roxy Music’s 1974 album Country Life) keeps the energy going but darkens the tone slightly, coiling itself around Rick Willis’ solid bass line which replaces the original’s tetchy menace for something far more serpentine – a move that only serves to heighten the prowling seduction of the song’s sordid subject matter. ‘Sea Breezes’ sheds its avant-garde, lurching aspects in favour of a far more liquid sound that suits the song perfectly. As it starts, there seems to be little new ground being tread (although the gradual emergence of Ferry’s vocal is a novel touch). That is, until the instrumental passage finishes and Thompson’s punchy snare announces an effortlessly in-the-pocket groove, as the rhythm section’s fluid playing allows Spedding’s fret wizardry to fill the sound with a touch of post-glam magic.

Of all the Roxy songs, though, the best is saved for last: ‘Re-Make/Re-Model’ itself. The track highlights the album’s strongest suits: laid-back, subtle and absolutely engrossing. The syncopated drums underpin John Gustafson’s slinky bass, with the chorus of singers and soulful brass refrains giving it more than a hint of the Stax revue – even allowing for Eddie Jobson’s synthesised undercurrent. It allows Ferry to give a more loose and unaffected vocal performance than the one on Roxy’s debut LP and makes the track an untrammelled delight.

Initially dismissed as lazy or facile, the passage of time has only revealed how truly stymied those 70s critics really were over this album as the Roxy re-models reveal that underneath the sonic cornucopia and outfits from outer space lay truly timeless songs. Add these to the glorious title track, a joyous take on Jimmy Reed’s ‘Shame, Shame, Shame’ (complete with masterful, duelling slide guitar and harmonica), and the down-home boogie triumph that is ‘The Price of Love’ and you have a criminally overlooked record that demands your attention. As the man himself said, “next time is the best time, we all know”.

–Hal Norman, 2010

 

History

The iconic is generally the result of a conflation of public perception with perfect timing, and these are both factors that loom large in Bryan Ferry’s third solo album, Let’s Stick Together, released in September 1976. With Roxy Music on hiatus, that Ferry’s solo career should come under increasingly intense scrutiny was only natural. However, what has forever sealed the reputation of this throwaway masterpiece is that under this watchful gaze he produced his most loved and accessible pop song (in the peerless title track that opens this record), anchored to a promotional video that defined effortless elegance and undoubtedly fostered most of the aesthetic ideals of the coming decade. Not only was his place in the pop firmament firmly established, but also the image that would come to define him as an artist in the general consciousness – the Lounge Lizard.

The album itself breaks with some of the traditional tropes set forth on the first two releases (no Dylan cover, for instance), a corollary of it’s meting-pot assemblage – a combination of b-sides, singles and an EP. Nonetheless, it retains a very cohesive sound that is instantly recognisable to fans of those earlier LPs, thanks largely to the retention of the previous album’s rhythm section of John Wetton and Paul Thompson, not to mention the revolving cast of Roxy regulars past-and-future (Chris Spedding, David O’List and Phil Manzanera, to mention just the guitarists). Within this setting, Ferry re-imagines a typically wide-ranging cast of covers (pre-LSD Beatles, enigmatic 30’s Jazz, American R&B), but also adds a twist: new treatments of the Roxy Music back catalogue. It is in these re-models of the earlier Roxy songs that Ferry truly reveals the soul stylist that always lurked beneath the studio fireworks.

Following on from the hip-shaking album opener, the version of ‘Casanova’ (from Roxy Music’s 1974 album Country Life) keeps the energy going but darkens the tone slightly, coiling itself around Rick Willis’ solid bass line which replaces the original’s tetchy menace for something far more serpentine – a move that only serves to heighten the prowling seduction of the song’s sordid subject matter. ‘Sea Breezes’ sheds its avant-garde, lurching aspects in favour of a far more liquid sound that suits the song perfectly. As it starts, there seems to be little new ground being tread (although the gradual emergence of Ferry’s vocal is a novel touch). That is, until the instrumental passage finishes and Thompson’s punchy snare announces an effortlessly in-the-pocket groove, as the rhythm section’s fluid playing allows Spedding’s fret wizardry to fill the sound with a touch of post-glam magic.

Of all the Roxy songs, though, the best is saved for last: ‘Re-Make/Re-Model’ itself. The track highlights the album’s strongest suits: laid-back, subtle and absolutely engrossing. The syncopated drums underpin John Gustafson’s slinky bass, with the chorus of singers and soulful brass refrains giving it more than a hint of the Stax revue – even allowing for Eddie Jobson’s synthesised undercurrent. It allows Ferry to give a more loose and unaffected vocal performance than the one on Roxy’s debut LP and makes the track an untrammelled delight.

Initially dismissed as lazy or facile, the passage of time has only revealed how truly stymied those 70s critics really were over this album as the Roxy re-models reveal that underneath the sonic cornucopia and outfits from outer space lay truly timeless songs. Add these to the glorious title track, a joyous take on Jimmy Reed’s ‘Shame, Shame, Shame’ (complete with masterful, duelling slide guitar and harmonica), and the down-home boogie triumph that is ‘The Price of Love’ and you have a criminally overlooked record that demands your attention. As the man himself said, “next time is the best time, we all know”.

–Hal Norman, 2010

 

Lyrics

1. Let’s Stick Together

(Harrison)

And now the marriage vow is very sacred
The man has put us together now
You ought to make it stick together
Come on, come on let’s stick together
You know we made a vow to leave one another never

But now you never miss your water till your well runs dry
Come on now baby give our love a try
Let’s stick together, c’mon c’mon let’s stick together
You know we made a vow to leave one another never

Then if you’re stuck for a while consider our child
How can it be happy without its ma and pa
Let’s stick together, c’mon c’mon let’s stick together
You know we made a vow to leave one another never

2. Casanova

You – the hero
So many times you’ve loved,
And didn’t linger

Now my finger
Points at you,
– Another loser
You – an island
On your own
Complete
In every detail

Monumental
A precious jewel
Or just a fool

Innovator, it’s in your mind
And blood
I watch it simmer

I see you’re courting more despair
No hope?
Not a glimmer

Now you’re nothing but second hand in glove
With second rate

Now you’re flirting with heroin
– Or is it cocaine?

Casanova, is that your name
Or do you live there?

I know my place is here with you tonight
But not together

3. Sea Breezes

Words & Music by Bryan Ferry

I’ve been thinking now for a long time
How to go my own separate way
It’s a shame to think about yesterday
It’s a shame

We’ve been running round in our present state
Hoping help would come from above
But even angels there
Make the same mistakes in love,
In love, in love, in love

Now that we are lonely
Life seems to get hard
Alone what a word lonely
Alone it makes me cry

Thought-train set in motion
Wheels in and around
Express our emotion
Tracks up then it cracks down

We’ve been running round in our present state
Hoping help would come from above
But even angels there
Make the same mistakes
In love,
In love, in love, in love

4. Shame, Shame, Shame

Words & Music by Jimmy Reed

(Lyrics in the brackets on the last
verse & chorus are sung simultaneously
by the backing vocals and are from
‘Can I get A Witness’
written by Lamont, Dozier, Holland.)

Well I tried to tell you baby
But it meant no sense
Now you got me baby
Up against this fence.

And Ain’t that a shame, shame shame
Shame, shame the way you do
Well it’s a shame, shame shame
Oh it’s a shame on you.

Well now you walk out in the evening
Don’t even say you’re gone
6 o’clock in the morning
You come walking home.

And ain’t that a shame, shame, shame
Shame, shame the way you do
Oh it’s a shame, shame, shame
Hey it’s a shame on you

Well I be sittin’ there waitin’
(Listen everybody)
Cryin’ for you to come home.
(Especially you girls)
When I wake up baby
(Is it right to be left alone)
I’m sittin’ here all alone
(While the one you love is never home?)

And ain’t that a shame, shame, shame
(I love too hard, my friends sometimes say)
Shame, shame the way you do.
(But I believe, I believe that a woman should be loved that way)

Well it’s a shame, shame, shame
(But it hurts me so inside to see her treat me so unkind)
Oh it’s shame on you.
(Somebody, somewhere tell her it’s unfair)

5. 2HB

Words & Music By Bryan Ferry

Oh I was moved by your screen dream
Celluloid pictures are living
Your death could not kill my love for you

Take two people romantic
Smoky nightclub situation
Your cigarette traces a ladder

Here’s looking at you kid celebrate years
Here’s looking at you kid wipe away tears
Long time since we’re together
Now I hope it’s forever

Ideal love flies away now
White jacket black tie wings too
You gave her away to the hero

Words don’t express my meaning
Notes could not spell out the score
But finding not keeping’s the lesson

Here’s looking at you kid
Hard to forget
Here’s looking at you kid
At least not yet
Your memory stays
It lingers ever
Will fade away never

6. The Price Of Love

Words & Music by (D.& P. Everly)

Wine is sweet and gin is bitter
Drink all you can but you won’t forget her

You talk too much, you laugh too loud
You see her face in every crowd

And that’s the price of love, the price of love
A debt you pay with tears and pain
The price of love, the price of love
It costs you more when you’re to blame

Kiss one girl kiss another
Kiss them all but you won’t recover

You’re dancing slow, you’re dancing fast
You’re happy now, but that won’t last

And that’s the price of love, the price of love
A debt you pay with tears and pain
The price of love, the price of love
It costs you more when you’re to blame

7. Chance Meeting.

Words & Music by Bryan Ferry

I never thought I’d see you again
Where have you been until now?
Well how are you?
How have you been?
It’s a long time since we last met

It seems like yesterday
When I first saw you
In your red dress smile
How could I forget that day?
I know that time spent well is so rare

8. It’s Only Love

Words & Music by (Lennon & McCartney)

I get high when I see you go by
My oh my
When you sigh, my, my inside just flies
Butterflies
Why am I so shy when I’m beside you?

It’s only love, and that is all
But it’s so hard loving you
Yes it’s so hard loving you, loving you.

Is it right that you and I should fight
Ev’ry night?
Just the sight of you makes night time bright
Very bright
Haven’t I the right to make it up girl?

It’s only love, and that is all
Why should I feel the way I do?
It’s only love, and that is all
But it’s so hard loving you
Yes it’s so hard loving you, loving you.

9. You Go To My Head

(Gillespie, Coots)

You go to my head and you linger like a haunting refrain
And I find you spinning ’round in my brain
Like the bubbles in a glass of champagne

You go to my head like a sip of sparkling Burgundy brew
And I find the very mention of you
Like the kicker in a julep or two

The thrill of the thought that you might give a thought to my plea
Cast a spell over me
Still I say to myself get a hold of yourself
Can’t you see that it never can be

You go to my head with a smile that makes my temperature rise
Like a summer with a thousand Julies
You intoxicate my soul with your eyes

Though I’m certain that this heart of mine
Hasn’t a ghost of a chance in this crazy romance
You go to my head Oh
You go to my head Oh
You go to my head
You go to my head

10. Re-make/Re-model

(Ferry)

I tried but I could not find a way
Looking back all I did was look away
Next time is the best time we all know
But if there is no next time where did I go?

She’s the sweetest queen I’ve ever seen
See here she comes see what I mean
I could talk talk talk talk talk myself to death
But I believe I would only waste my breath

Ooh show me

I tried but I could not find a way
Looking back all I did was look away
Next time is the best time we all know
But if there is no next time where to go

She’s the sweetest queen I’ve ever seen
See here she comes see what I mean
I could talk talk talk talk talk myself to death
But I believe I would only waste my breath

11. Heart On My Sleeve

Words & Music by Gallagher & Lyle

I wear my heart on my sleeve
I’m not afraid
To say what I mean
Mean what I say

Set myself up
Let myself down
I may be a fool
Spread it around
But I,
Just want to let you know
Sometimes I,
Find it so hard not to show
So I sigh,
And I let my feelings go

Oo, I wear my heart on my sleeve
Don’t count the cost
If I can’t live in love
Then surely I’ve lost

Oh you tend to get burned
You tend to get bruised
But it’s my life
The way that I choose

And I,
Just want to let you know
Sometimes I,
Find it so hard not to show
Ooh don’t sigh
Baby you’re not alone

I’ll wear my heart on my sleeve
I’ll wear my heart on my sleeve
I’ll wear my heart on my sleeve
Wear my heart on my sleeve

Ooh and I just want to let you know
Sometimes I find it so hard not to show
Don’t you sigh
Maybe you’re not alone

Wear your heart on my sleeve
Wear your heart on my sleeve
Wear your heart on my sleeve
Wear your heart on my sleeve
Wear your heart on my sleeve
Wear your heart on my sleeve
Wear your heart on my sleeve
Wear your heart on my sleeve
Wear your heart on my sleeve