Stealing Fire

Stealing Fire

by Bruce Cockburn
Stealing Fire

Stealing Fire

by Bruce Cockburn

CD

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Overview

After visiting Central America, Bruce Cockburn recorded Stealing Fire, part of which passionately and eloquently details what he'd seen while in Nicaragua and Guatemala. With the opening track, the terse rocker "Lovers in a Dangerous Time," Cockburn conveys both a sense of urgency and uncertainty. There's a brief calm as the second half begins, before a triad of songs written about his time spent in Central America brings the record to a sober conclusion. These three tunes, which, like the majority of the album, sport a tight, worldbeat, folk and rock flavor, are the true highlights of Stealing Fire, and Cockburn at his very best. The first, "Nicaragua," is part observation, part commentary, and part tribute to the Sandinista-led revolution in that country. "If I Had a Rocket Launcher" follows, and is arguably Cockburn's most powerful merging of personal and political feelings. Written after witnessing Guatemalan refugees being chased across the border by gun-wielding helicopters, "Rocket Launcher" evokes not only the pain and suffering of the people, but the conflict between Cockburn's pacifist leanings, and the vengeful anger and hatred incited by such a horrific sight. The Nicaraguan, road-inspired "Dust and Diesel" closes the record with a portrait of a country whose daily contrast of beauty and violence is summed up by the images of people who are proud, hopeful, passionate, afraid, and tired. Stealing Fire, despite a few less than compelling tracks, is the work of an artist at his peak. It also contains some of the most intensely significant material by a singer/songwriter in the 1980s. ~ Brett Hartenbach

Product Details

Release Date: 04/07/2009
Label: True North Records
UPC: 0620638031827
Rank: 44884

Tracks

  1. Lovers in a Dangerous Time
  2. Maybe the Poet
  3. Sahara Gold
  4. Making Contact
  5. Peggy's Kitchen Wall
  6. To Raise the Morning Star
  7. Nicaragua
  8. If I Had a Rocket Launcher
  9. Dust and Diesel
  10. Yanqui Go Home
  11. Call It the Sundance

Album Credits

Performance Credits

Bruce Cockburn   Primary Artist,Guitar,Vocals,Dulcimer
Jon Goldsmith   Keyboards,Vocals (Background)
Jerry Johnson   Horn
Michel Pouliot   Drums
Joel Feeney   Vocals (Background)
Mike Malone   Horn
Tim Ryan   Vocals (Background)
Shawne Jackson   Vocals (Background)
Chi Sharp   Percussion
Paul Henderson   Vocals (Background)
Sharon Williams   Vocals (Background)
Rick Tait   Horn
Fergus Marsh   Bass,Stick
Carole Pope   Vocals (Background)
Leroy Sibbles   Vocals (Background)
Vern Dorge   Horn
Judy Cade   Vocals (Background)
Kerry Crawford   Vocals (Background)

Technical Credits

Jon Goldsmith   Composer,Producer
Bart Schoales   Art Direction
George Whiteside   Photography
Blair Drawson   Cover Painting
Fergus Marsh   Composer
Mike Reese   Mastering
Ron Searles   Assistant Engineer
Bruce Cockburn   Composer
Kerry Crawford   Composer,Producer
David Lowery   Composer
John Naslen   Engineer
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