eMusic Review 0
The discovery that Rod Stewart was, once upon a time, young, hungry, and cool is a delightful one that every young music fan gets to make sooner or later, and Every Picture Tells A Story is as good a place to start down this road as any. Stewart's first four solo records are all of a piece; on each of them, young Rod borrowed some members from his blues-rock group The Faces, assembled a collection of blues and folk standards and a few early rock tunes, and then figured out a way to make each one spotlight his gloriously weathered husk of a voice as best as possible. As he went along, he began to sneak more of his own songs into the mix, and on Every Picture Tells A Story, he had nailed the perfect balance between his tunes and others'. For the first time, Stewart's songs not only stood up to the covers he chose, but began to outshine them.
Case in point: The record opens up with the rambunctious title track, a six-minute assholes' travelogue that takes the young Rod Stewart through France — from which he is summarily thrown out by authorities — to Rome, where… read more »