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Day of the Eagle: The Best of Robin Trower
Day of the Eagle: The Best of Robin Trower

Day of the Eagle: The Best of Robin Trower in Bloomington, MN

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Day of the Eagle: The Best of Robin Trower
goes a long way toward providing a definitive best-of culled from his early and most definitive works as a solo artist. This 17-cut selection is compiled from the eight albums that documented his greatest commercial success, beginning with 1973's
Twice Removed from Yesterday
and ending with 1980's
Victims of the Fury
, all of them recorded for
Chrysalis Records
. This is not to suggest that
Trower
's work lessened in quality; not at all. It's simply that his visibility and his place in the spotlight were greatest during these years. Compilation producer
Tim Chacksfield
did an excellent job organizing and sequencing these tracks according to aesthetics rather than chronology -- after all, if that's what a punter wants, he/she can program the CD player, right? The set blasts out of the gate with one of the quintessential examples of
's pure blazing rock power with
"Day of the Eagle"
from the flawless
Bridge of Sighs
recording. It's followed by the silvery blues that is
"Caledonia"
(not the rhythm & blues standard but an original written by the guitarist along with the late bassist/lead vocalist
James Dewar
) from 1976's
Long Misty Days
. The blues ratchets up to overdriven rock with the sinister
"Confessin' Midnight"
off 1975's
For Earth Below
. The minor complaint here is that selections from the 1976
Robin Trower Live!
album were substituted for the original versions. This is minor, but still, it would have been nice to hear the full-on solid squall version of
"Too Rolling Stoned"
rather than the raved-up, muddy-sounding live one. Some of the nice touches are the inclusion of
' title cut, one of the finest ballads to come from a power trio ever (other excellent ballads here are
"About to Begin"
and
"Daydream"
). Also included is the scorching B-side "Take a Fast Train from 1973 that backed
's title track. It needs to be mentioned that the title cut from 1977's
In City Dreams
marked beautiful new terrain for the trio that had replaced drummer
Reg Isidore
with
Bill Lordan
and let
Dewar
simply front the band as lead vocalist when they acquired the talent of
Sly & the Family Stone
bassist
Rusty Allen
. In sum, this set is solid from top to bottom, with a good liner essay by
Phil Sutcliffe
that may be a bit much on hyperbole, but nonetheless provides a well-researched professional biography in a small amount of space. ~ Thom Jurek
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