The Confessor (album)

The Confessor is the seventh studio album by the American hard rock singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Joe Walsh. The album was released in mid 1985, on the labels Warner Bros. Records, and Full Moon Records. The album was produced by Grammy Award winning producer and sound engineer Keith Olsen as well as Walsh himself. The album peaked at number 65 on the Billboard 200.

The Confessor
Studio album by
ReleasedMay 21, 1985 (1985-05-21)
Recorded1984
StudioGoodnight LA Studios, Los Angeles, California, US
Genre
Length36:15
LabelWarner Bros.
Producer
Joe Walsh chronology
You Bought It – You Name It
(1983)
The Confessor
(1985)
Rocky Mountain Way
(1985)
Singles from The Confessor (album)
  1. "The Confessor"
    Released: 1985

Album artwork

The cover art for the album features the painting Zwei Männer in Betrachtung des Mondes (Two Men Contemplating the Moon), a famous work by the German nineteenth-century romantic landscape artist Caspar David Friedrich, with a grainy photograph of Walsh in behind. The back cover is another painting by Friedrich, Der Wanderer über dem Nebelmeer (Wanderer above the Sea of Fog).

Composition

The album includes a cover of Michael Stanley's "Rosewood Bitters," which got some FM airplay in the US;[1] Walsh played slide guitar on the original recording which Stanley originally recorded. On this version instead he plays an electric guitar.[2]

"Slow Dancing" is a song written by Loz Netto for Walsh. Netto was the guitarist in the English band called "Moon" from the mid 1970s and the band "Sniff 'n' the Tears" from the late 1970s.

A variety of styles are explored on this album, including elements of blues, pop, and even Caribbean music. The title song is more in the vein of progressive rock.

Recording

The album would be something that Walsh's new girlfriend Stevie Nicks would get involved with. Nicks' old friend Keith Olsen was hired to produce the album and the musicians were the superimposed LA session stalwarts like: Jim Keltner, Mike Porcaro, Waddy Wachtel, Randy Newman, Alan Pasqua and a lot of musicians Walsh had never worked with before; the only familiar face was Timothy B. Schmit (of the Eagles) who only recorded backing vocals.[3]

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic [4]

Upon its release, the album was poorly received by many critics but sold quite well. Guitar World, critic Bruce Malamut wrote that the album is "the apologia of a strictly raised mid-western episcopalian after living in rock and roll sin for ‘Fifteen Years’ on the road," and that "The balance … is a sober retrospective from rock’s own Harpo Marx."[5] Rolling Stone said that "Walsh is trying to make the kind of record he used to make a decade ago, and the result is, well, out of date, sound [sic] like something out of a 1975 time capsule."[3] Writing retrospectively for AllMusic, critic James Chrispell highly complimented the title track, but wrote of the album "Joe Walsh just hasn't been able to produce a complete album of great material, and The Confessor is no exception. The first half is dreck... Worthwhile for the title track alone."[4]

Live performances and Tour

After the release of the album, Walsh toured again with Joe Vitale in Australia and in the US. In Australia the band was called "Creatures From America". In the US they were the opening act on some gigs for Foreigner.[6]

"The Confessor" and "Good Man Down" were the only tracks from this album which were performed live on that tour.[6]

Track listing

All songs by Joe Walsh, except where noted.

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Problems"Walsh, Bill Arbuckle3:55
2."I Broke My Leg" 3:12
3."Bubbles" 3:33
4."Slow Dancing"Loz Netto4:22
5."15 Years" 3:52
6."The Confessor" 7:06
7."Rosewood Bitters"Michael Stanley3:29
8."Good Man Down"Walsh, Waddy Wachtel4:14
9."Dear John" 2:40
Total length:36:15

Personnel

Additional musicians
Production
Engineering
Album artwork

Charts

Album - Billboard (United States)

Year Chart Position
1985 Billboard 200 65

Singles - Billboard (United States)

Year Single Chart Position
1985 "The Confessor" Mainstream Rock Tracks 8

See also

References

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