Caravan Tonight

Caravan Tonight
Studio album by Steven Grossman
Released 1974
Recorded December 1973 7 January 1974 at Sound Ideas Studios N.Y.C
Genre Folk rock
Label Mercury
Producer Bobby Flax & Lanny Lambert for Very Very Productions LTD

Caravan Tonight is the first album by American singer-songwriter Steven Grossman. Released in 1974, it was the first album dealing with openly gay themes and subject matter within its lyrics to be released on a major label (Mercury Records).[1] At the time of its release, Stephen Holden in Rolling Stone described it as, "...staggering, its appeal to the finest human values universal."[2] Grossman himself said of the album, "The songs on the album came from a time when I was flipping out. Really confused... But for the first time I could write about what I felt not what I thought other people wanted to hear."[3]

Track listing

Side one
  1. Caravan Tonight
  2. Out
  3. Five O'Clock Song
  4. Christopher's Blues
  5. Song to Bonnie
  6. Song to That M&M Man
Side two
  1. You Don't Have to Be Ashamed
  2. Many Kinds of Love
  3. Can't...Papa Blues
  4. Circle Nine Times
  5. Dry Dock Dreaming

Musicians

  • Acoustic guitar and vocals – Steven Grossman
  • Acoustic lead and electric guitar – Vinny Fuccella
  • Bass – Andy Munson
  • Drums – Jimmy Young
  • Keyboards and recorder – Chris Dedrick
  • Congas and percussion – George Devens
  • Mandolin, banjo, pedal steel guitar – Eric Weissberg
  • Background vocals – Steven, Bobby, Lanny and the Free Design
  • Horns and strings arranged and conducted by Chris Dedrick
  • Studer, Wayne (1994). Rock on the Wild Side. San Francisco: Leyland Publications. pp. 99–100. ISBN 0-943595-46-0.

References

  1. Studer, Wayne (1994). Rock on the Wild Side. San Francisco: Leyland Publications. pp. 99–100. ISBN 0-943595-46-0.
  2. https://www.rollingstone.com/music/lists/10-singer-songwriter-albums-rolling-stone-loved-in-the-1970s-youve-never-heard-20150716/steven-grossman-caravan-tonight-20150715 accessed 10th August 2016
  3. Interview in "In Touch" magazine vol 2 no 1 reproduced http://queermusicheritage.com/jun2005mc.html accessed 10 August 2016
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