Rick Wakeman & Dave Cousins - Hummingbird (2022)

Artist: Rick Wakeman, Dave Cousins
Title: Hummingbird
Year Of Release: 2002 / 2022
Label: Cherry Red Records
Genre: Rock, Folk Rock, Progressive Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 43:39
Total Size: 224 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Hummingbird
Year Of Release: 2002 / 2022
Label: Cherry Red Records
Genre: Rock, Folk Rock, Progressive Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 43:39
Total Size: 224 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. The Young Pretender (05:50)
2. Hummingbird (03:41)
3. So Shall Our Love Die (03:36)
4. Steppes (01:23)
5. October to May (03:26)
6. Ice Maiden (00:41)
7. Higher Germanie (04:35)
8. Stone Cold is the Woman's Heart (04:32)
9. Crie Du Coeur (01:26)
10. All in Vain (03:49)
11. Can You Believe (04:44)
12. Via Bencini (02:12)
13. Forever Ocean Blue (03:38)
Rick Wakeman and Dave Cousins played together in the Strawbs in the early '70s, and they reunited for this 2002 release, with support from a few other musicians (most notably violinist Ric Sanders). Cousins tends to be the more dominant personality here inasmuch as he takes all the vocals and handles more of the songwriting. In addition, some songs that appeared on previous Strawbs and Dave Cousins solo records are revisited, such as "October to May" and "Stone Cold Is the Woman's Heart." It's not just a Dave Cousins album that happens to have Wakeman on keyboards, however, as Wakeman co-wrote some of the songs with Cousins, as well as being solely responsible for the composition of a few instrumental interludes. The combination of Cousins' folky, sometimes narrative-like songs and Wakeman's classical-influenced keyboard work is unusual. But there's a bit of a faded weariness to both the material and its execution -- more so even than on other, better Cousins/Strawbs records, where battle-fatigued weariness is a frequent quality. Wakeman's more effective on piano than synthesizer, and the more modern instrumentation doesn't gel as comfortably with folk-rock-based songs such as these. ~ Jimmy James