Closing Time (album)

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Closing Time
Closing Time cover
Studio album by Tom Waits
Released March 1973
Recorded Sunset Sound, Hollywood
Genre Jazz
Length 45:46
Label Asylum
Producer Jerry Yester
Professional reviews
Tom Waits chronology
Closing Time
(1973)
The Heart of Saturday Night
(1974)

Closing Time is the debut album of Tom Waits, released in 1973 on Asylum Records, produced and arranged by former Lovin' Spoonful member Jerry Yester.

Contrary to some belief, the song "Ice Cream Man" is a Waits original, not a cover of the John Brim blues standard of the same title. Waits' version, however, was covered in 1993 by Screamin' Jay Hawkins for his album Black Music For White People.

The song "Midnight Lullaby" borrows its opening line from the English nursery rhyme "Sing a Song of Sixpence".

Contents

[edit] Recording

The album's producer Jerry Yester descibed the recording process for Closing Time thus:

Tom's real easy to work with, we had a real good relationship. I really wasn't interested in telling him what to do. I just wanted to get the music out of him. That was the important thing. So, we talked about how he wanted to do it and I would make suggestions. There was a very good relationship between all of the band members. That album was absolutely the easiest one I've ever done in my life. It was done in, like, a week and a half ... in the studio at Sunset Sound. One reason it was good, I think, was we couldn't get the nighttime hours that I was looking for. We had to come in from ten to five every day. It took two days to get used to it, but once we did it was great. We were even awake when we got there, and it was like a job. Everybody was real alert and into it. We took our lunch breaks, came back and worked again. And we had the evening to do something with. It was like being human, you know? [1]

[edit] Cover versions by other artists

While Waits' debut album received good reviews, it was not, by and large, a huge commercial success. However it did reach a wider audience through a number of cover versions by more successful artists of a few of its tracks. Later in 1973 Tim Buckley released the album Sefronia, which contained a cover of Wait's song "Martha" from Closing Time, the first ever cover of a Tom Waits song by a known artist. This cover was also collected in the 1995 compilation Step Right Up: The Songs of Tom Waits. "Martha" was covered again by Meat Loaf on his 1995 album Welcome To The Neighborhood. A cover version of "Ol' '55" was later a hit for The Eagles, who recorded it for their 1974 album On the Border.

[edit] Tour

The first tour upon which Waits embarked in support of his debut album, his first ever national tour, ran from April to June 1973. The band line-up for this tour consisted of: Tom Waits (vocals, acoustic guitar, piano), Bob Webb (standup bass), Rich Phelps (trumpet), and John Forsha (guitar). The opening date of this tour was at The Cellar Door in Washington, D.C. opening for Tom Rush. The tour would go on to take in dates in venues such as Max's Kansas City in New York and The Boarding House in San Francisco, opening for acts such as Danny O'Keefe, Charlie Rich, Buffalo Bob Smith (of Howdy Doody fame) and John Hammond [2]. A second promotional tour ran from November to December 1973, opening for Frank Zappa. This tour consisted of only the stripped-down line-up of Waits on vocals, acoustic guitar, and piano, with Bob Webb on standup bass. [1]

[edit] Track listing

All tracks written by Tom Waits.

  1. "Ol' '55" – 3:58
  2. "I Hope That I Don't Fall in Love With You" – 3:54
  3. "Virginia Avenue" – 3:10
  4. "Old Shoes (& Picture Postcards)" – 3:40
  5. "Midnight Lullaby" – 3:26
  6. "Martha" – 4:30
  7. "Rosie" – 4:03
  8. "Lonely" – 3:12
  9. "Ice Cream Man" – 3:05
  10. "Little Trip to Heaven (On the Wings of Your Love)" – 3:38
  11. "Grapefruit Moon" – 4:50
  12. "Closing Time" (instrumental) – 4:20

[edit] Personnel

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b Tom Waits Timeline: 1949 - 1975. Tom Waits Library. Retrieved on 2007-01-09.
  2. ^ Tom Waits Performances: 1970 - 1975. The Tom Waits Library. Retrieved on 2007-01-09.