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Barnes and Noble

Forbidden City Tour

Current price: $13.99
Forbidden City Tour
Forbidden City Tour

Barnes and Noble

Forbidden City Tour

Current price: $13.99
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Prior to his death in a plane crash on May 11, 1996,
Walter Hyatt
was working on his third solo album. Exactly how far he had gotten on it is not clear. The unsigned liner notes to this album say, "By the spring of 1996 Walt had almost forty songs in waiting." In the publicity materials accompanying the album,
Hyatt
's widow
Heidi
, who is the executive producer of the disc, is quoted as saying, "Walter had been in the studio that last year recording songs for his next project." The issue of how close to completion
got comes up because it is clear that
Some Unfinished Business, Vol. 1
is an album on which a group of musicians and producers have added overdubs to
's unfinished tracks. There is no indication in the notes or the publicity material about how much overdubbing was done, but a guess from listening would be that it is quite extensive. Likely,
's contribution was limited to his vocals and guitar, and the original tracks were really just simple demos. That said, there is nothing tentative about his singing, and there is nothing unfinished about the songs themselves. Never does
give anything other than a polished vocal performance, and he never sounds like he's improvising or singing dummy lyrics (as, for instance,
John Lennon
sometimes did on the similarly posthumous
Milk and Honey
). And even if all the other instrumentation, including strings and brass here and there, as well as lots of
country
instruments, is newly added, the resulting tracks don't sound much different from what might have been expected from
. So, this really can be taken as the successor to
King Tears
and
Music Town
that never was. As such, it explores the variety of
's eclectic musical interests, which range from
to
jazz
blues
, and on to elements of
traditional pop
. There are some wonderful songs here, among them the ballad
"Going to New Orleans"
"Reach for Me,"
a
rockabilly
shuffle that would have been a good song for
Elvis Presley
to record if he were around to do so. At times, the producers have left in a little bit of the rough demo sound, notably on
"When You're Alone,"
adding to the intimacy of the song itself. This is an album that should be welcomed by
fans who weren't able to get enough of the singer/songwriter during his lifetime. The matter of overdubbing the work of a deceased artist is always problematic and sometimes actually ghoulish. Here, it seems to fulfill the potential of songs
finished as compositions and as vocals, if not otherwise. ~ William Ruhlmann

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