The Kinks : Sleepwalker
On February 12, 1977, The Kinks released Sleepwalker, an attempt to win over the American record buying public after years of concept albums and cult status. Their first album for Arista, Sleepwalker would climb all the way up to US 21 on the Billboard album charts and win over critics. Said Ray Davies: "Sleepwalker did all right. One reviewer said it was like raising Lazarus from the dead. Our records sales went up to the 350,000 mark, which is good. Having started a couple of years earlier at 25,000 on Village Green Preservation Society, we were pushing it up."
The tunes were more straight forward but perhaps something else was lost: the characteristic Kinks sound. This really could be just about any band.
One of the more interesting stories from Sleepwalker is Clive Davies insisting that "Brother" get the full "Bridge Over Troubled Water" treatment with strings and backing vocals. Davies thought it would be a major hit but Arista never released "Brother" as a single.
Billy Altman's "clear cut triumph" review for Rolling Stone:
Even as a staunch Kinks supporter, I was beginning to have my doubts. Although the band's following has grown steadily since they made it into the Seventies (by the skin of their teeth) with "Lola," they seemed to have peaked with Muswell Hillbillies. Ray Davies seemed hopelessly stuck on a thematic dead-end street (perhaps he had started believing all those notices about personifying the "voice of the little people"). But Sleepwalker — the first Kinks album since Lola that's unencumbered by either a horn section or female vocal chorus — is a clear-cut triumph both for Davies and the band.
A few of these songs smack of the self-righteousness that's hindered Davies' recent writing; but the beautiful "Stormy Sky," in which clouds become a symbol for romantic conflict, and "Full Moon," a scary tune about madness and loss of self-recognition, are among his best efforts. The recurrent themes are fear, depression and failed utopianism; in "Life Goes On," we are warned that "life'll hit you when you least expect it." Yet in the end, there always remains a faint glimmer of hope: "Take that frown off your head/'cause you're a long time dead." "Juke Box Music," which seems strangely set apart from the rest, is the best song here, a rocker about a woman whose entire life is spent living inside the story lines of her favorite records. It should be a pathetic song, yet Davies has us tapping our feet, singing along.
The Kinks' playing on Sleepwalker is easily their most powerful since Lola. Dave Davies' aggressive guitar work is pushed into the forefront, and the intensity of his lead work seems to rouse the entire group. One is continually reminded just what a fine and forceful band the Kinks can be as those ethereal falsetto backing vocals, so long dormant, rise again like the spirit of "Sunny Afternoon" and "Waterloo Sunset."
Robert Christgau's B- review of Sleepwalker :
Ray Davies's temporary abandonment of theatrical concepts may have ruined his show, but it's freed him to write individually inspired songs again. It's also freed his band to play up to its capacity, which unfortunately falls midway between professional virtuosity and amateur fun. Doubly unfortunate, at least half the songs are in a similar range. Recommended: "Jukebox Music" and "Full Moon."
As a self-proclaimed Kinks nut your post has proved me a sham! I've fallen at the first hurdle so to speak. Sandwiched between Schoolboys and Misfits, Sleepwalker is their one album I know the least (read not at all!) Clearly I need to get on board. I award myself a C minus (Must do Better) Seriously, I congratulate you on posting anything to do with the Kinks. Keep the faith
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