Rod Stewart: Another Country
Rod Stewart
Another Country
(Capitol Records)
Rod Stewartâs Another Country (his 28th studio release!) opens with the big, commercial, fiddle-led âLove Is,â a fine, fun tune covering banal lyric territory, but still something that will bring a smile to your face. âWalking in the Sunshineâ again sees Rod using his big chanting female backing vocalists, though this one features a spectacular middle flamenco guitar section and Rod mining his lower, almost growly range. Along the way here in these 17 tracks we get Celtic mandolin/hand drum workouts like âWe Can Win,â a little reggae on âLove and Be Lovedâ and lots of upbeat stuff, kind of sounding the same. But as has been evident in his entire long career, Rod Stewart can deliver in songwriting as well as singing. The acoustic guitar ballad âWay Back Homeâ is a beautiful story song about Rodâs childhood, but the ballad âCan We Stay Home Tonight?â is better with itâs Clapton âWonderful Tonightâ-like slow simplicity and single guitar line of a man just aching to get home to his lady. Rodâs voice sounds about as best as it ever has on the string-building song for his child, âBatman, Superman, Spiderman.â The loud drum âThe Drinking Songâ is a hoot, with just a bit of regret to Rodâs delivery of his younger looser times around loud slide guitar. The funk of horns pushing on âOne Night With Youâ shows off Rodâs soul possibilities with his backing vocalists and the big commercial swing of âGreat Dayâ sees that Celtic fiddle again. But the real killer here is âIn A Broken Dreamâ with its loud, nasty guitar lead, bleeding organ and Rod wailing in an old-time blues rock style; itâs by far the best tune on the album for me. Another Country might not see Rod stretching out or offering anything classic, but its a solid release from the old rocker.