Showing posts with label Paul Carrack. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paul Carrack. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 28, 2025

Various Artists - A Tribute to Burt Bacharach and Hal David, Royal Albert Hall, London, Britain, 6-29-2000

Unfortunately, I'm all done posting Gershwin Prize and MusiCares tribute concerts, at least until more of them become publicly available. But there are other similar tribute concerts out there. This one is so similar in format that it's basically the same as the other two kinds of concerts. This concert honors the songwriting team of Burt Bacharach and Hal David. 

In fact, there was a Gershwin Prize concert in 2012 honoring these two songwriters. But I'd argue this one is superior. For one thing, its twice as long. But also, it has more big name stars, especially Dionne Warwick, who is widely considered the top singer of Bacharach-David songs.

I'm not sure of the exact reason for this concert, be it an anniversary or something like that. But I suppose it doesn't matter much. But I do know the profits from the concert went to support the Nordoff-Robbins Music Therapy non-profit. And it was broadcast on TV at the time, and later released on DVD. That's how I have it here in excellent sound quality, since it's never been released on any audio format.

By the way, I know Hal David was there, because of photos of him there, including the cover photo I selected. But there's no sign of him on this recording. I suspect he gave a speech near the end of the concert, just like Burt Bacharach did, but his speech got edited out of the TV show (and thus the DVD) since Bacharach is the much more famous one out of the two. 

This album is an hour and 42 minutes long. 

01 talk (emcee)
02 Wives and Lovers (Kenny Lynch)
03 talk (emcee)
04 One Less Bell to Answer (Lucie Silvas)
05 talk (emcee)
06 Don't Make Me Over (Lynden David Hall)
07 talk (emcee)
08 Reach Out for Me (Brian Kennedy)
09 talk (emcee)
10 Do You Know the Way to San Jose (Yazz)
11 talk (emcee)
12 You'll Never Get to Heaven (Shola Ama)
13 talk (emcee)
14 Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head (Sacha Distel)
15 talk (emcee)
16 This Guy's in Love with You (Paul Carrack)
17 talk (emcee)
18 A House Is Not a Home (Petula Clark)
19 Wishin' and Hopin' (Petula Clark)
20 [They Long to Be] Close to You (Petula Clark)
21 talk (emcee)
22 [There's] Always Something There to Remind Me (Leo Sayer)
23 talk (emcee)
24 Alfie (Sumudu Jayatilaka)
25 talk (emcee)
26 I'll Never Fall in Love Again (Brian Kennedy)
27 talk (emcee)
28 What's New Pussycat (Brian Conley)
29 Twenty Four Hours from Tulsa (Brian Conley)
30 talk (emcee)
31 I Just Have to Breathe (Teish O'Day)
32 talk (emcee)
33 Make It Easy on Yourself (Edwin Starr)
34 talk (emcee)
35 The Look of Love (Linda Lewis)
36 talk (emcee)
37 Elvis Costello (talk)
38 I Just Don't Know What to Do with Myself (Elvis Costello with Burt Bacharach)
39 talk (emcee)
40 Walk on By (Dionne Warwick with Burt Bacharach)
41 I Say a Little Prayer (Dionne Warwick with Burt Bacharach)
42 Do You Know the Way to San Jose (Dionne Warwick with Burt Bacharach)
43 Anyone Who Had a Heart (Dionne Warwick with Burt Bacharach)
44 What the World Needs Now Is Love (Dionne Warwick & Everyone)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/6Ec9rngv

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/mrGkAfgvmiFeA5M/file

The cover photo is from this exact concert. That's Bacharach on the left and David, wearing glasses, on the right.

Wednesday, February 26, 2025

Paul Carrack - BBC Sessions, Volume 2: Friday Night Is Music Night, LSO St. Luke's, London, Britain, 5-15-2009

Here's a second Paul Carrack BBC album, from 2009. Like the first one, it's a concert. But this is an unusual concert for Carrack because he's backed by an orchestra.

As I mentioned with my write-up for the first volume, Carrack has worn many hats in his long music career, being the lead singers for the bands Ace, Squeeze, and Mike + the Mechanics at different times, as well as having a lengthy solo career.

Carrack's time as one of the lead singers for Mike + the Mechanics ended around 2005, and his solo career hit albums and singles had petered out by this time. But he still had a rich back catalog to draw on here, which is what he mostly did, performing songs by Ace, Squeeze, and especially Mike + the Mechanics. The lead single from his latest album, "Ain't No Love in the Heart of the City," was performed here, but it's actually a cover of a 1970s hit song by Bobby "Blue" Bland. 

This album is unreleased. The sound quality is excellent.

This album is 51 minutes long.

01 talk (Paul Carrack)
02 How Long (Paul Carrack)
03 talk (Paul Carrack)
04 Another Cup of Coffee (Paul Carrack)
05 talk (Paul Carrack)
06 I Don’'t Want to Hear Any More (Paul Carrack)
07 talk (Paul Carrack)
08 Ain't No Love in the Heart of the City (Paul Carrack)
09 Eyes of Blue (Paul Carrack)
10 talk (Paul Carrack)
11 The Living Years (Paul Carrack)
12 talk (Paul Carrack)
13 Tempted (Paul Carrack)
14 talk (Paul Carrack)
15 I Don'’t Want Your Love, I Need Your Love (Paul Carrack)
16 talk (Paul Carrack)
17 Over My Shoulder (Paul Carrack)
18 talk (Paul Carrack)
19 No Doubt about It (Paul Carrack)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/h3Q7rdou

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/KM7GiNKZAEwwnM6/file

The cover photo is from a concert on October 25, 2009.

Wednesday, February 5, 2025

Paul Carrack - BBC Sessions, Volume 1: In Concert, Shepherd's Bush Empire, London, Britain, 11-18-1997

I've posted a couple of early 1980s BBC concerts that co-starred Nick Lowe and Paul Carrack. I'm planning on posting a couple of Nick Lowe solo career BBC concerts also. I'm more of a Lowe fan, but I've discovered a couple of Carrack solo career BBC concerts, so I'm posting them as well. Here's the first one, from 1997.

Paul Carrack has had a very strange music career. He sings lead vocals on many famous hits, but he's only had one sizable hit in the U.S., "Don't Shed a Tear" in 1987, and none in Britain. Yet he's the lead vocalist on "How Long" by Ace, "Tempted" and "Loving You Tonight" by Squeeze, and a bunch of Mike and the Mechanics hits, including "Silent Running," "Over My Shoulder," and "The Living Years." I think he'd be much more famous if his name had prominently featured on all those hits. 

Carrack has often been recruited as a band member or session player mostly because of his excellent, soulful voice, not to mention his keyboard playing and songwriting skills. One gets to see all that one display here. It's a relatively short (and unreleased) concert, at less than an hour. But it features some of the hits mentioned above by Ace, Squeeze, and Mike and the Mechanics, although oddly, not his big solo hit, "Don't Shed a Tear." Perhaps that's because this concert took place in Britain, and while that was a Top Ten hit in the U.S., it only reached Number Sixty in the British singles chart.

This album is 54 minutes long.

01 Another Cup of Coffee (Paul Carrack)
02 You Give Me Something (Paul Carrack)
03 Eyes of Blue (Paul Carrack)
04 Time to Let Go (Paul Carrack)
05 The Way I'm Feeling Tonight (Paul Carrack)
06 Perfect Love (Paul Carrack)
07 Satisfied (Paul Carrack)
08 Tempted (Paul Carrack)
09 talk (Paul Carrack)
10 Over My Shoulder (Paul Carrack)
11 The Living Years (Paul Carrack)
12 How Long (Paul Carrack)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/t6BxoVmo

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/UKB637Sd7B2cGdU/file

The cover photo shows Carrack in a Mike and the Mechanics concert at the Royal Albert Hall in London on April 18, 1996.

Saturday, March 2, 2024

Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack - BBC Sessions, Volume 2: In Concert, Paris Theatre, London, Britain, 9-15-1984

Here's another BBC concert featuring Nick Lowe and Paul Carrack.

It's kind of crazy that I'm posting not just the first but the second BBC concert featuring Lowe and Carrack, because they never released and album together. But Lowe had been in Rockpile from 1977 to 1981, and shared the lead vocals duties with Dave Edmunds. After that band broke up, he kept the same basic formula going, but shared lead vocals duties with Paul Carrack instead, from 1982 to 1985.

At the time of this concert, Lowe was more prolific than Carrack. Lowe released solo albums in 1982, 1983, and 1984, with the most recent one being titled "Nick Lowe and His Cowboy Outfit." Only two songs were from that album: "Half a Boy and Half a Man" and "Maureen." Carrack's most recent solo album at the time had come out in 1982. But Carrack had been involved with more hits. He sang lead vocals on "Tempted" by Squeeze in 1981, which is probably their most popular song. And back in 1974, he wrote and sang "How Long" by the band Ace, which reached Number One in one U.S. singles chart.

This album is unreleased. Most of it sounds excellent. However, three songs are from a different source and don't sound as good: "Soul Cruisin'," "Switchboard Susan," and "How Long." I suspect what happened was the concert was significantly longer, but the BBC edited it down to fit an hour long time slot. But there were different edited versions, for instance this was also broadcast by the Westwood Radio One network in the U.S., so some of the other versions had different songs on it.

I tried my best to improve the three poorer sounding songs with some audio editing tricks, but I could only do so much. I also boosted the lead vocals relative to the instruments on most of the songs, since they seemed a bit low in the mix.

By the way, around 1982, the Lowe and Carrack band was called "Noise to Go." But by the time of this concert, the name was changed to "Nick Lowe and His Cowboy Outfit" (just like the title of his 1984 album), even though the personnel was basically the same. Carrack left in 1985 to become to lead singer for the Genesis side project band Mike + the Mechanics.

This album is one hour long.

01 Soul Cruisin' (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
02 Saint Beneath the Paint (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
03 talk (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
04 Tempted (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
05 Cruel to Be Kind (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
06 talk (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
07 Switchboard Susan (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
08 talk (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
09 Don't Give My Heart a Break (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
10 talk (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
11 Is It You (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
12 talk (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
13 Maureen (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
14 Little by Little (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
15 Raging Eyes (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
16 talk (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
17 Half a Boy and Half a Man (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
18 talk (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
19 Love in Vain (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
20 Marie Provost (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
21 Crackin' Up (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
22 I Need You (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
23 How Long (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
24 Burning (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)

https://www.upload.ee/files/16344939/NICKLWPULCRRCK1984BBSssonsVlum2InCncrtPrisThatrLndnBrtin__9-15-1984_atse.zip.html

These Lowe and Carrack concerts seem to have been mostly forgotten on the Internet, because I could barely find any photos of them. I did find a couple of videos of them playing together in the early 1980s though. So I took screenshots of that to make the cover. They always were on different parts of the stage, so I had to put two screenshots together.

Friday, August 4, 2023

Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack - BBC Sessions, Volume 1: BBC Rock Hour, Hammersmith Palais, London, Britain, 3-15-1982

I've got many Nick Lowe-related many albums to post, but for some reason I've been slow to post them. I should try to post here. Here's something at least.

From 1977 to 1981, Lowe was a co-leader of the band Rockpile, along with Dave Edmunds. For a few years after that, he basically replicated that formula, but with Paul Carrack taking the place of Edmunds as the other lead singer and sometimes songwriter. I've already posted one album from this duo, an imagined studio album that smashed their two 1982 solo albums into one. You can find that here:

https://albumsthatshouldexist.blogspot.com/2019/12/nick-lowe-paul-carrack-voodoo-knife.html

I also found not one but two BBC concerts of them playing together, so here's the first one. Many of Lowe's songs are from his Rockpile years. Meanwhile, Carrack had briefly been in the band Squeeze, but he'd only sung one song, which is possibly their best known song, "Tempted." Naturally, he sang that one. And they also sang lots of songs from their respective 1982 albums, "Nick the Knife" for Lowe and "Suburban Voodoo" for Carrack.

The sound quality is pretty good, though not as excellent as most BBC shows. There were no problems needing fixing.

This album is 55 minutes long. Based on that length, I suspect the concert was longer, but the BBC cut it down to fit it into an hour-long time slot.

01 I Love the Sound of Breaking Glass (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
02 Stick It Where the Sun Don't Shine (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
03 talk (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
04 Tempted (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
05 talk (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
06 Always Better with You (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
07 Burning (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
08 Marie Provost (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
09 Cruel to Be Kind (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
10 talk (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
11 Lesson in Love (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
12 A Little Unkind (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
13 Wish You Were Here (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
14 Switchboard Susan (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
15 Cracking Up (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
16 I Knew the Bride [When She Used to Rock and Roll] (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
17 Nutted by Reality (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
18 Heart of the City (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
19 One's Too Many (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)
20 [What's So Funny 'Bout] Peace, Love and Understanding (Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack)

https://www.upload.ee/files/17201063/NICKLWENPULCRRCK1982BBSssonsVolum1RckHourHmmrsmthPlaisLndnBitin__3-15-1982_atse.zip.html

alternate:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/BDdNnzVb

Given that Lowe and Carrack toured together for about three years, I'm surprised that I've found almost no photos of them together. I did find this one, from 1982. But it was in black and white, so I colorized it.

UPDATE: On October e, 2024, I upgraded the photo with the use of the Krea AI program.

Saturday, November 26, 2022

Roger Waters - Colisee de Quebec, Quebec City, Canada, 11-7-1987

Here's something that I really like. If you're a Pink Floyd/Roger Waters fan, you should definitely check it out. This isn't just a bootleg of the date and location in the title; it's something I've carefully put together. It'll take a bit for me to explain why this is special and unique.

Roger Waters, the main singer and songwriter for Pink Floyd, did a solo tour in 1985, another one in 1987, then stayed away from touring until 1999. I've already posted a excellent soundboard bootleg of a show he did in 1985 (with Eric Clapton on guitar, no less). It turns out there's no bootleg of a complete 1987 show with soundboard quality. However, I made a complete show with some editing. I started with the Quebec City show of the title. That had 20 of the 30 songs here with excellent sound quality, due to those songs being professionally recorded for a radio broadcast. Then I found another eight of the songs played that night from a different stop on the tour, in London, England. Those also have excellent sound quality, due to them being professionally recorded for another radio broadcast. That recording wasn't very long, but it was very lucky that almost all of those songs were the ones not included in the Quebec recording.

After that, there were just two songs on the Quebec City set list that I didn't have: "Not Now John" and "Going to Live in L.A." Unfortunately, there don't seem to be any soundboard level boots of those. But I listened to those songs from a bunch of audience tapes, and found what I decided was the best ones, from a concert in Hoffman Estates, Illinois. Those two don't sound quite as good as the others, but they're pretty close. Plus, it's just two songs. The result is that you can hear what a complete 1987 Roger Waters concert sounded like, with truly impressive sound quality.

However, it's more complicated than that. Waters was touring to support a pretty usual concept album, "Radio K.A.O.S." To explain what it was about, I'm going to quote a (slightly edited) review I saw for it written on social media by someone named Castovalve:

"Roger's protagonist is disabled, can hear radio waves 'in his head', moves to America after his brother is jailed, meets radio DJ Jim Ladd, fakes a nuclear Armageddon, but ultimately humanity is redeemed via the magic and sweeping majesty of the Live Aid benefit concert. I feel stupid even trying to describe the plot. ... But, this album is soaked in horrifying 80's production - it's all fake drums, synthesizers, and squealing sax solos. ... Jim Ladd contribues unfunny and annoying dialogue to the record."

So yeah, as you can guess from that summary, the album had issues. Waters himself later basically disowned it, mainly due to the production:

"Between [producer] Ian Ritchie and myself, we really fucked that record up. We tried too hard to make it sound modern. I allowed myself to get pushed down roads that were uncomfortable for me. I should never have made that record."

I agree that the album suffered from typical 1980s production excesses. But the songs sound much better live in concert, without all the studio tinkering. They're also nicely mixed with lots of classic Pink Floyd songs.

However, Waters didn't just have a regular concert. He tried to keep some of the conceits of the concert album going. For instance, there was a dialogue between the story's main character, Billy, and the radio DJ Jim Ladd. Ladd appeared live for every show of the tour and talked to the audience and/or to a computerized voice of Billy, before or even or some of the songs. Furthermore, there also was the idea that the story was playing out live over Ladd's radio station ("Radio K.A.O.S"), so there were attempts to make the concert seem like it was being played over the radio, even for the audience there live. For instance, Ladd typically started the concerts playing one or two recorded hits by other artists. A recording of the Pink Floyd classic "Arnold Layne" was played. There were fake commercials. There even was a call in section where real fans called in and had Waters answer questions live in front of the audience.

For better or worse, parts of the Quebec City concert broadcast on the radio, and thus available here in excellent sound quality, cut out nearly all of that. I'm not a big fan of the fake commercials and such myself, so I decided to cut out what was left, and just keep the songs. Thus I cut out a few remaining instances of Billy and/or Jim Ladd talking. I think this makes the concert much more amenable to repeat listening. The radio station conceits didn't really work anyway, in my opinion, because the songs from "Radio K.A.O.S." with the album concept were scattered around and mixed with Pink Floyd songs, so the very hard to follow plot became even harder to follow. I think it's better to just enjoy the songs as songs. Stripped from the concept and the talking bits, I think the "Radio K.A.O.S." songs hold up pretty well. It helps that two of the better ones, "Molly's Song" and "Going to Live in L. A." didn't actually appear on the album but showed up as B-sides instead. (Another regret Waters had was that he'd wanted to make a double album, not a single one, so a bunch of songs were left off it, including those two. Most of the rest remain unreleased.)

If you look at the set list below, you'll see a lot of songs have "[Edit]" in their titles. Those are the ones where I made significant edits. In about half of the cases, I made edits to remove the talking of Billy and/or Jim Ladd. For the other half, I had to make some edits to make the songs from different sources fit together. For instance, one might come to a sudden end, so I would add in some applause patched in from the end of another song. The bottom line is that this should sound like a single concert now, with a focus on just the songs. (By the way, Waters himself said virtually nothing between songs, since he gave that role to Jim Ladd.)

A further complication is that there were a few songs Waters didn't want to sing because they were out of his vocal range. Most of those were Pink Floyd classics that he wrote but were sung by band member David Gilmour. For this tour, Paul Carrack (of the bands Ace, Squeeze, and Mike + the Mechanics) sang most of those.

Even with all the banter, fake commercials, prerecorded songs, and such cut out, this is a longer concert than usual, at two hours and ten minutes. 

In case you want to know more about what you missed, here's a good review of a concert on this tour, with explanations about everything that happened, song by song (the set lists differed only a little bit from night to night):

Amazing Pudding , issue #26, 1987 (pink-floyd.org)

From what I understand, when Waters toured again many years later (1999 and after), he'd lost some vocal range and power, and it's said he often lip-syncs to many of his songs. So if you want one best recording of him all real in a solo concert, in my opinion this would be the one to hear.

01 Radio Waves (Roger Waters)
02 Welcome to the Machine [Edit] (Roger Waters)
03 Who Needs Information (Roger Waters)
04 Money (Roger Waters with Paul Carrack)
05 In the Flesh (Roger Waters)
06 Have a Cigar (Roger Waters with Paul Carrack)
07 Pigs [Three Different Ones] (Roger Waters)
08 Wish You Were Here (Roger Waters)
09 Mother (Roger Waters)
10 Molly's Song [Edit] (Roger Waters with Doreen Chanter)
11 Me or Him [Edit] (Roger Waters)
12 The Powers That Be [Edit] (Roger Waters)
13 Going to Live in L. A. [Edit] (Roger Waters)
14 Sunset Strip [Edit] (Roger Waters)
15 Get Your Filthy Hands Off My Desert (Roger Waters)
16 Southampton Dock (Roger Waters)
17 If (Roger Waters)
18 5-06 AM [Every Stranger's Eyes] (Roger Waters)
19 Not Now John [Edit] (Roger Waters)
20 Another Brick in the Wall, Part 1 [Edit] (Roger Waters)
21 The Happiest Days of Our Lives (Roger Waters)
22 Another Brick in the Wall, Part 2 (Roger Waters)
23 Nobody Home (Roger Waters)
24 Home [Edit] (Roger Waters)
25 Four Minutes [Edit] (Roger Waters with Doreen Chanter)
26 The Tide Is Turning [After Live Aid] [Edit] (Roger Waters)
27 Breathe (Roger Waters with Paul Carrack)
28 Brain Damage (Roger Waters)
29 Eclipse (Roger Waters)
30 talk (Roger Waters)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/n76BLbhv

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/Td7odxFaJRPaecG/file

alternate:

https://www.imagenetz.de/aw2vo

The cover photo comes from the Hoffman Estates concert where two of the songs here were recorded. Apparently he wore these dark sunglasses for the entire tour, because he wore them for all of the photos I saw of him on stage.

Thursday, December 12, 2019

Nick Lowe & Paul Carrack - Voodoo Knife - Selected Best Tracks (1982)

Here's a type of album I almost never do. Some people like to compile albums that never existed, such as picking the best of the Beatles' solo songs to create albums they might have recorded had the Beatles stayed together after 1970. With a few exceptions, such as some of my Crosby, Stills, Nash (and/or) Young albums, I try to stay more grounded in what actually happened. But I'm going to break that rule and make another speculative album.

In 1982, Nick Lowe recorded and released his first true solo album without Rockpile, "Nick the Knife." Also in 1982, Paul Carrack recorded and released his second solo album, "Suburban Voodoo." At first glance, the two albums seemingly have nothing to do with each other. But actually, they're so closely related that I've taken the best songs from both and made one album out of them. I've even combined the two album titles to create the title "Voodoo Knife." It's nonsensical, but it works for me.

So why the heck did I do this? For starters, the exact same band, Noise to Go, which included both Lowe and Carrack, played on all the songs for both albums. Lowe also produced Carrack's album. Furthermore, he wrote or co-wrote six of the songs on it. These two albums were the start of a fruitful collaboration between Lowe and Carrack. From 1982 to 1985, they did all their concert tours together. Lowe had just spent the previous four or five years collaborating with Dave Edmunds and the rest of the band Rockpile, so this was kind of Rockpile 2.0, with Carrack replacing Edmunds.

Furthermore, the two 1982 albums sound united. An AllMusic.com reviewer noted that Carrack's album "sounded very much like a Lowe album with Carrack singing." A Trouser Press reviewer similarly noted that Carrack's album "sounds like the souled-up flipside of 'Nick the Knife' - if anything, it's better. Yet it succeeds because of Lowe's production and composing presence, which complements Carrack's excellent voice with the kind of pop smarts that bring out his best."

On top of all that, both Lowe's and Carrack's albums had a bunch of excellent songs on each album, as well as a few duds on each. If one combines the two albums together, one gets all the good songs while jettisoning the rest. I think Lowe's 1977 album "Jesus of Cool" (a.k.a. "Pure Pop for Now People") and his 1979 album "Labour of Lust" are brilliant five-star albums. By combining the best of Lowe's and Carrack's 1982 albums, I think one gets an album that is very much at that same high level, and in the same rocking, catchy vein.

In putting this album together, I discarded three Lowe songs ("Let Me Kiss Ya," "Zulu Kiss," and "From Now On") and five Carrack songs ("I'm in Love," "What a Way to Go," "So Right, So Wrong," "Call Me Tonight," and "I Found Love"). Note though that Carrack also covered "From Now On," a song Lowe wrote, so it's included here as the Carrack version.

The end result is an album that's 42 minutes long, which is an ideal album length for that era. Lowe and Carrack both get seven songs. Personally, I think that if they'd combined efforts, they would have had a classic album that was a big seller. Instead, their separate 1982 albums just did okay, with the bright spot being Carrack getting a US Top 40 hit with "I Need You" (a song Lowe co-wrote, by the way). I've started the album with "Always Better with You," because that song is on my short list of songs most deserving of being a huge hit if only they'd gotten the right promotion and exposure and so on. It sounds very much like a 1960s Motown hit to my ears.

01 Akways Better with You (Paul Carrack)
02 Burning (Nick Lowe)
03 Lesson in Love (Paul Carrack)
04 Heart (Nick Lowe)
05 I Need You (Paul Carrack)
06 Stick It Where the Sun Don't Shine (Nick Lowe)
07 Queen of Sheba (Nick Lowe)
08 Don't Give My Heart a Break (Paul Carrack)
09 My Heart Hurts (Nick Lowe)
10 A Little Unkind (Paul Carrack)
11 Out of Touch (Paul Carrack)
12 Too Many Teardrops (Nick Lowe)
13 Raining, Raining (Nick Lowe)
14 From Now On (Paul Carrack)

https://www.upload.ee/files/16696726/NICKLWENPULCRRCK1982_VodooKnfeAltrnate_atse.zip.html

The cover art took a lot of work for me to do. Basically, I started with the cover of Carrack's "Suburban Voodoo" album. But I did a lot of rearranging with the yellow circles and new text to fit the new artist names and the new album name. I also removed the photo of Carrack in the middle and replaced it with a photo of Lowe and Carrack together, from around 1982. Unfortunately, I couldn't find any good color photos, so I tinted this one blue.