Back in Line

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Back in Line
File:Steeleye Span - Back in Line.jpg
Studio album by Steeleye Span
Released 1986
Recorded 1986
Genre Electric folk
Length 44:00
Label Shanachie
Producer John Acock
Steeleye Span chronology
Sails of Silver
(1980)Sails of Silver1980
Back in Line
(1986)
Tempted and Tried
(1989)Tempted and Tried1989
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 2.5/5 stars[1]

Back in Line is an album by the electric folk band Steeleye Span.

This album, the band's 12th, was released in 1986, after a hiatus of almost 6 years. It is their first album without founding member Tim Hart, who quit the music business entirely. It is also the last album they recorded with Maddy Prior's husband, Rick Kemp, until They Called Her Babylon; Kemp suffered a shoulder injury that forced him to stop playing for a long time.

Like the previous album, Sails of Silver, this album was not well received by fans, and reviews tend to see the album as being slickly packaged but erratic in quality.[citation needed]

A single was released from this album - "Somewhere in London/ Lanercost". This suggests that "Somewhere in London" was recorded on the same sessions as the album. When Park Records re-released the album in 1991, this lost track appeared at the end, together with two live tracks - "Spotted Cow" (the first track on '’Below the Salt'’) and "One Misty Moisty Morning" (the first track on Parcel of Rogues).

The album's highlights include the energetic funk version of "Blackleg Miner", a similarly funky "White Man", which features as complicated a vocal arrangement as Steeleye has ever offered, and "Isabel", a strong piece sung by Prior, about the Countess of Buchan who helped crown Robert the Bruce. In general, the pieces have a strong rock feel.

Song Highlights

Like Sails of Silver, Back in Line contains many songs written by the band. All of the songs on the album are placed in an historical context. "Isabel", "Lanercost" and "Take My Heart" all deal with the Scottish Wars of Independence and Robert the Bruce. "White Man" is a critique of European colonialism, and "Peace on the Border" concern the 18th century rebellions and deportations. "Scarecrow" was about the Battle of Cropredy Bridge, a Royalist victory during the English Civil War.

Isabel

The band claims "Isabel" is about Isabella MacDuff, Countess of Buchan, whom they allege was a paramour of Robert the Bruce.[2] She did crown him King of Scotland in 1306. After he was defeated at the Battle of Methven in June 1306, she was captured by the English and imprisoned in an outdoor cage at Berwick-upon-Tweed for four years. The song is a fictionalized first person perspective of her time on public display.

Lady Diamond

"Lady Diamond" is a version of a Child ballad 269, a version of which also appeared on The Tannahill Weavers album, Passage (1984). Nigel Pegrum and Rick Kemp helped produce several of the Tannahill's albums.

A Cannon by Telemann

This selection enables Peter Knight to show off his classical training by performing both violin parts. A canon is essentially a melody played by two or more instruments in a follow-the-leader or looping technique.

Blackleg Miner

"Blackleg Miner" is late nineteenth or early twentieth century union protest song the band first recorded for Hark! The Village Wait (1970). Substantially re-orchestrated with a much funkier feel than the original version, the song produced some controversy when the band performed it in Nottingham in 1986, not long after a major mine strike.[citation needed] It was recorded directly to audio cassette at the Thea in November 1985.[2]

Lanercost

Lanercost refers to a north Cumbrian village and priory of the same name from which King Edward I attempted to subdue the Scotts. Each of the four verses begins by describing the actions of the canons (priests) at the priory - fishing; praying; working in the scriptorium and finally carrying the King's coffin. The rest of each verse then discusses Edward and his actions - lying in bed "cursing fate" (as he is too ill to fight); delighting at his capture and execution of the Bruce's brothers; leaving to ride north and then dying before his work can be finished. The chorus is centered around a repetition of the Kyrie eleison, presumably suggesting that this would have been sung by the canons themselves.

Take My Heart

The band asserts, "Before Robert the Bruce died, he asked his close friend and comrade Sir James Douglas to take his heart to be buried next to the Sepulchre in the Holy Land."[2]

Track listing

No. Title Writer(s) Personnel notes Length
1. "Edward"   Bob Johnson
  • Bob Johnson lead vocal
  • Vince Cross DX7
6:20
2. "Isabel"    
  • Maddy Prior lead vocal
  • Peter Knight piano
5:22
3. "Lady Diamond"   Bob Johnson
  • Bob Johnson lead vocal
4:41
4. "Canon by Telemann"   Georg Philipp Telemann
  • Instrumental
  • Peter Knight all instruments (violins)
1:44
5. "Peace on the Border"    
  • Rick Kemp lead vocals, bass, guitar
  • Vince Cross DX7
4:23
6. "Blackleg Miner"   Traditional
  • Maddy Prior lead vocals
4:06
7. "White Man"   Peter Knight
  • Peter Knight lead vocals, percussion, violin, bass guitar, piano
4:39
8. "Lanercost"   Maddy Prior, Rick Kemp
  • Maddy Prior lead vocals
  • Rick Kemp bass, guitar, vocals
  • Vince Cross DX7
4:32
9. "Scarecrow" (The Battle of Croperdy Bridge)  
  • Bob Johnson lead vocals, guitar
  • Vince Cross DX7
4:13
10. "Take My Heart"    
  • Maddy Prior lead vocals
  • Rick Kemp bass, guitar, vocals
3:58

Personnel

Guest musician
  • Vince Cross - DX7

References

  1. Back in Line at AllMusic
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