Seeking Major Tom

Seeking Major Tom

by William Shatner
Seeking Major Tom

Seeking Major Tom

by William Shatner

Vinyl LP(Long Playing Record)

$54.99 
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Overview

William Shatner follows up his cult classic 1968 album The Transformed Man and equally compelling 2004 Ben Folds collaboration Has Been with 2011's double-disc space odyssey Seeking Major Tom. Featuring a bevy of guest artists including Sheryl Crow, Peter Frampton, Steve Miller, Bootsy Collins, and others, the album presents more of Shatner's now storied "is it a joke or not" spoken word takes on various well-known pop songs. As with The Transformed Man, Seeking Major Tom is clearly meant to play off Shatner's iconic role as Captain James T. Kirk on Star Trek, and the space theme is present throughout every song here, including such cuts as "Space Oddity," "Space Cowboy," "Walking on the Moon," "Spirit in the Sky," and others. In fact, disc one is bookended with Shatner's title track version of the 1983 Peter Schilling hit "Major Tom (Coming Home)" and Crow covering K.I.A.'s 2003 song "Mrs. Major Tom." Overall, the album is a get-what-you-pay-for offering that both matches Shatner's earlier efforts and, on a few occasions, even transcends what has come before. The real surprise here, however, is not derived from the clearly intended-to-be-humorous moments such as Shatner's campy take on Thomas Dolby's "She Blinded Me with Science" featuring an inspired appearance from Collins. On the contrary, it's the more subdued and even serious moments when Shatner is allowed to settle into character and use the gravitas of his trained actor's voice that he actually does transcend the irony of his schtick. His impressionistic reading of Kurt Weill's "Lost in the Stars" is a gorgeous and poignant recording featuring Shatner over piano and accompanied sympathetically by eminent jazz saxophonist Ernie Watts. Similarly engaging is Shatner's poetic recitation of Pink Floyd's "Learning to Fly," which retains all of the original's epic space rock majesty. However, it is Shatner's reworking of his infamous 1978 Science Fiction Awards take on Elton John and Bernie Taupin's "Rocket Man" that is truly amazing. Straying from the hard-boiled "astronaut as private dick" approach he took in 1978, here Shatner plays it -- not unlike himself (81 years old at the time of this recording) -- as a man nearing the end of his life, second-guessing the choices he's made and inflicted upon his family. By the time he gets to "Mars ain't the kind of place to raise your kids, 'fact...it's cold as hell," he has taken it to a wholly deeper place, and found a more nuanced meaning in the song that transcends his own satirical style. It's like he's lived with the performance for so long that it's become part of him, and the meaning has changed as he's aged. It's an unexpectedly moving moment and not at all what one foresees heading into an album that promises a team-up between Shatner and metal guitar god Zakk Wylde on Black Sabbath's "Iron Man." Ultimately, by sending up his own persona while still playing it straight, Shatner has become master of his own satirical legend, and in that sense anybody looking for jokes about tribbles delivered by a passionately tunnel-visioned, acid-tripping Shatner in full-on "KHAN!!" mode will find much to enjoy on Seeking Major Tom. Still, even when just kidding around, Shatner proves himself to be an exacting master of his craft, and more than a few times on Seeking Major Tom the joke is clearly on us. ~ Matt Collar

Product Details

Release Date: 10/11/2011
Label: Cleopatra
UPC: 0741157706215
Rank: 37552

Tracks

Disc 1

  1. Major Tom (Coming Home)
  2. Space Oddity
  3. In a Little While
  4. Space Cowboy
  5. Space Truckin¿¿¿
  6. Rocket Man
  7. She Blinded Me With Science
  8. Walking on the Moon
  9. Spirit in the Sky
  10. Bohemian Rhapsody
  11. Silver Machine
  12. Mrs. Major Tom

Disc 2

  1. Empty Glass
  2. Lost in the Stars
  3. Learning to Fly
  4. Mr. Spaceman
  5. Twilight Zone
  6. Struggle
  7. Iron Man
  8. Planet Earth

Album Credits

Performance Credits

William Shatner   Primary Artist
Patrick Kennison   Guitar,Vocals
Steve Howe   Featured Artist
Steve Hillage   Featured Artist
Steve Miller   Featured Artist
Ian Paice   Featured Artist
Sheryl Crow   Featured Artist
Bootsy Collins   Featured Artist
Edgar Froese   Featured Artist
Toots Hibbert   Featured Artist
Lyle Lovett   Featured Artist
Warren Haynes   Featured Artist
Ernie Watts   Featured Artist
John Wetton   Featured Artist
Wayne Kramer   Featured Artist
Peter Frampton   Featured Artist
Nick Valensi   Featured Artist
Michael Schenker   Featured Artist
Mike Inez   Featured Artist
Brad Paisley   Featured Artist
Zakk Wylde   Featured Artist
Candice Night   Featured Artist
Patrick Moraz   Featured Artist
Carmine Appice   Featured Artist
Ritchie Blackmore   Featured Artist
Johnny Winter   Featured Artist
Dave Davies   Featured Artist
Brent Fields   Keyboards
Tammy Tomahawk   Vocals

Technical Credits

Tony Iommi   Composer
Paul Tavenner   Mixing,Mastering
Simon LeBon   Composer
Steve Miller   Composer
Bob Ezrin   Composer
Ian Paice   Composer
Bill Ward   Composer
Ian Gillan   Composer
Freddie Mercury   Composer
Larry Mullen, Jr.   Composer
Geezer Butler   Composer
Roger Glover   Composer
Bernie Taupin   Composer
Norman Greenbaum   Composer
Ozzy Osbourne   Composer
Anthony Moore   Composer
Adam Hamilton   Composer,Producer
Sting   Composer
David Bowie   Composer
Juergen Engler   Producer
William Shatner   Composer
David Gilmour   Composer
Brian Perera   Executive Producer
Elton John   Composer
Ritchie Blackmore   Composer
Jon Lord   Composer
Jon Carin   Composer
Roger McGuinn   Composer
K. Anderson   Composer
Thomas Dolby   Composer
Adam Clayton   Composer
Paul Hewson   Composer
Roger Taylor   Composer
Tim Yasui   Promoter,Marketing
Pete Mills   Mixing,Drum Engineering
John Lappen   A&R
Scott Liggett   Sound Design
Chris Lietz   Producer
Brent Fields   Programming
Jon Schnell   Sound Design
David Evans   Composer
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