The Envoy (Bonus Tracks)
03/27/2007 | Rhino / Wea
Lyrics from The Envoy (Bonus Tracks)
All Music Guide Review
While moderation was never Warren Zevon's strong suit, his efforts to clean himself up in the early '80s resulted in two of his finest albums, 1980's literate but corrosive Bad Luck Streak in Dancing School and the following year's explosive live set Stand in the Fire. It seemed as if the wired chaos of Zevon's personal life had been channeled into his art on those LPs, but after another bout with the bottle and another attempt at sobriety, Zevon tried another approach at merging his music and his life on 1982's The Envoy. On The Envoy's best songs, Zevon tackles his dangerous appetites head on; "Charlie's Medicine" is a chilling requiem for a drug dealer who used to sell him dope, "Jesus Mentioned" is a spare but curiously moving meditation on the death of Elvis Presley, who "went walking on the water with his pills," and the ragged but right "Ain't That Pretty at All" is an unlikely but powerful recovery anthem in which he howls "I'd rather feel bad than not feel anything at all." When Zevon confronts his own demons on The Envoy, the album is intense and compelling stuff, but unfortunately there aren't enough of these moments to prop up the rest of the set, which is smart and literate but not especially exciting. Novelist Thomas McGuane co-wrote "The Overdraft," a hard-charging rocker that unfortunately doesn't make much sense, while the languid "The Hula Hula Boys" plays like a joke in which the punch line got lost, and the two love songs, "Let Nothing Come Between You" and "Looking for the Next Best Thing," manage to sound at once heartfelt and like lesser variations on themes he'd covered with greater strength before. The Envoy would prove to be Zevon's last album for five years after he took another stumble into addiction, but while it's an often brave and ambitious disc, the high points don't quite redeem its weaknesses. [In 2007, Rhino Records gave The Envoy its belated debut on CD in a remastered and expanded edition featuring new liner notes from David Wild and four bonus tracks recorded during the album's original sessions. There's an alternate take of "Let Nothing Come Between You" with some alternate lyrics and a sloppy pass at the Troggs' "Wild Thing" that's fun but hardly revelatory. More interesting are "Word of Mouth," a taut and rhythmic instrumental, and "The Risk," which sounds like it wasn't quite finished but walks a provocative line between Zevon's tales of romance and self-destruction; it would have made a nice coda for the album, and is the one really essential new track on this edition.] ~ Mark Deming, All Music Guide
The Envoy (Bonus Tracks) Track Listing
The Envoy (Bonus Tracks) Notes
The reflective 1982 masterpiece Zevon once described as "The Excitable Boy Grows Up," The Envoy makes its CD debut with this release. Highlights include the title track, the moving "Never Too Late For Love," "The Hula Hula Boys," and "The Overdraft," a co-write with novelist Thomas McGuane featuring a ripping Lindsey Buckingham solo. Liner notes by Rolling Stone editor David Wild.
Credits of The Envoy (Bonus Tracks)
- Rick Marotta
- Drums
- Jeff Porcaro
- Drums, Log Drums, Pule Sticks
- Cheryl Pawelski
- Reissue Supervisor
- J.D. Souther
- Vocals (Background), Harmony
- David Wild
- Liner Notes
- Warren Zevon
- Synthesizer, Guitar (12 String Acoustic), Prepared Piano, Original Album Producer, Piano (Electric), Vocals (Background), Producer, Harmony, Soloist, Piano, Guitar
- Jordan Zevon
- Harmony
- Waddy Wachtel
- Guitar (Acoustic), Harmony, Original Album Producer, Producer, Guitar, Vocals (Background), Percussion
- LeRoy Marinell
- Guitar (Acoustic)
- Leland Sklar
- Bass
- Randee Saint Nicholas
- Photography
- Jimmy Wachtel
- Design, Cover Photo
- Steve Woolard
- Project Assistant
- Jonathan Exley
- Actor
- Gloria Von Jansky
- Make-Up
- Ginger Dettman
- Project Assistant
- Mike Engstrom
- Product Manager
- Cory Frye
- Editorial Supervision
- Mike Botts
- Drums
- Beatriz Pace
- Project Assistant
- John Black
- Lighting
- Gary Braglia
- Actor
- Janice Colty
- Lighting
- Don Grabowski "Don G."
- Actor
- Timothy J. Griffith
- Lighting
- Dan Hajek
- Lighting
- James Houghton
- Actor
- Harry Landry
- Actor
- Glenn Marygold
- Lighting
- Terry Novell
- Lighting
- Timothy Phelps
- Lighting
- Ted Shackleford
- Actor
- Liuba Shapiro
- Product Manager
- Ralph Stiers
- Lighting
- Wayne Tanouye
- Assistant Engineer
- Jorge Calderon
- Harmony
- James Austin
- Reissue Supervisor
- Niko Bolas
- Engineer
- Hugh Brown
- Design
- Michael Curtis
- Design Assistant, Assistant Photographer
- Kenny Edwards
- Guitar
- Steve Forman
- Percussion
- Bob Glaub
- Bass
- George Gruel
- Actor, Assistant
- Dan Hersch
- Remastering
- Jim Horn
- Recorder
- Bill Inglot
- Producer, Remastering
- Danny Kortchmar
- Guitar
- Russ Kunkel
- Drums
- Greg Ladanyi
- Producer, Actor, Engineer, Mixing, Original Album Producer
- David Landau
- Guitar, Guitar (Rhythm), Vocals (Background)
- Steve Lukather
- Guitar
- Lindsey Buckingham
- Harmony
- Don Henley
- Harmony
- Graham Nash
- Harmony



















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