
Requiem For An Almost Lady
This is a group of songs about one lady⦠her name is not important⦠she knows who she wasā¦What is important is once she loved me very muchā¦These songs are a truthful attempt to show the effect the loss of this love had on me⦠They are not all sad songs full of self pity and remorse⦠but more a mixture of good and hard time, old and new thought, lost and found feeling, and near and far places⦠There was no pleasure (as there usually is) in writing this album⦠there was only the dull āthudā of realization that something you once took for granted is gone⦠and those āblue eyesā will never again look through this āold grey curtaināā¦The lady is dead now and Iām still alive⦠doing the same things with others I once did with her⦠and maybe thatās what being alive is all about it⦠if it isnāt⦠āto hell with itā.
- Lee Hazlewood
āHe was a storyteller, thatās his music⦠the storytelling. Thatās the thing I fell in love with him for. This final story that we see, the Requiem story, is kind of looking back at a career, I think. Not just a relationshipāitās his story. I think itās authentic and the most revealing, really, because other things are cloaked, cloaked in romanticism, in a way. When you think of āSandā and āJose,ā āMy Autumnās Done Comeā and āSome Velvet Morningā⦠those are stories, theyāre stories you make up⦠theyāre fiction. This is a little closer to home, I think.ā -Suzi Jane Hokom.
Light in the Attic Records is proud to continue its Lee Hazlewood Archival Series with LHI Records final release. 1971ās Requiem for An Almost Lady is a personal statement and one of the heaviest break-up albums of all time. There are no lilting strings, sweeping choirs, or dancing trumpets. The arrangements are stripped down to the raw nerve; Leeās emotions are the orchestra here. The listener eavesdrops on a sonic journal of heartbreak. After losing his lady, his record label, and his country, Lee etches his woes to wax.
[[Release Description]]This is a group of songs about one lady⦠her name is not important⦠she knows who she wasā¦What is important is once she loved me very muchā¦These songs are a truthful attempt to show the effect the loss of this love had on me⦠They are not all sad songs full of self pity and remorse⦠but more a mixture of good and hard time, old and new thought, lost and found feeling, and near and far places⦠There was no pleasure (as there usually is) in writing this album⦠there was only the dull āthudā of realization that something you once took for granted is gone⦠and those āblue eyesā will never again look through this āold grey curtaināā¦The lady is dead now and Iām still alive⦠doing the same things with others I once did with her⦠and maybe thatās what being alive is all about it⦠if it isnāt⦠āto hell with itā.
- Lee Hazlewood
āHe was a storyteller, thatās his music⦠the storytelling. Thatās the thing I fell in love with him for. This final story that we see, the Requiem story, is kind of looking back at a career, I think. Not just a relationshipāitās his story. I think itās authentic and the most revealing, really, because other things are cloaked, cloaked in romanticism, in a way. When you think of āSandā and āJose,ā āMy Autumnās Done Comeā and āSome Velvet Morningā⦠those are stories, theyāre stories you make up⦠theyāre fiction. This is a little closer to home, I think.ā -Suzi Jane Hokom.
Light in the Attic Records is proud to continue its Lee Hazlewood Archival Series with LHI Records final release. 1971ās Requiem for An Almost Lady is a personal statement and one of the heaviest break-up albums of all time. There are no lilting strings, sweeping choirs, or dancing trumpets. The arrangements are stripped down to the raw nerve; Leeās emotions are the orchestra here. The listener eavesdrops on a sonic journal of heartbreak. After losing his lady, his record label, and his country, Lee etches his woes to wax.
[[Selling Points]]- Album remastered from pristine LHI master tapes
- Includes outtake āIāve Just Learned to Runā and previously unreleased demo āLittle Birdā
- Liner notes by Hunter Lea including an interview with Suzi Jane Hokom
- LP housed in a deluxe gatefold Stoughton tip-on jacket
Original: $1.29
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This is a group of songs about one lady⦠her name is not important⦠she knows who she wasā¦What is important is once she loved me very muchā¦These songs are a truthful attempt to show the effect the loss of this love had on me⦠They are not all sad songs full of self pity and remorse⦠but more a mixture of good and hard time, old and new thought, lost and found feeling, and near and far places⦠There was no pleasure (as there usually is) in writing this album⦠there was only the dull āthudā of realization that something you once took for granted is gone⦠and those āblue eyesā will never again look through this āold grey curtaināā¦The lady is dead now and Iām still alive⦠doing the same things with others I once did with her⦠and maybe thatās what being alive is all about it⦠if it isnāt⦠āto hell with itā.
- Lee Hazlewood
āHe was a storyteller, thatās his music⦠the storytelling. Thatās the thing I fell in love with him for. This final story that we see, the Requiem story, is kind of looking back at a career, I think. Not just a relationshipāitās his story. I think itās authentic and the most revealing, really, because other things are cloaked, cloaked in romanticism, in a way. When you think of āSandā and āJose,ā āMy Autumnās Done Comeā and āSome Velvet Morningā⦠those are stories, theyāre stories you make up⦠theyāre fiction. This is a little closer to home, I think.ā -Suzi Jane Hokom.
Light in the Attic Records is proud to continue its Lee Hazlewood Archival Series with LHI Records final release. 1971ās Requiem for An Almost Lady is a personal statement and one of the heaviest break-up albums of all time. There are no lilting strings, sweeping choirs, or dancing trumpets. The arrangements are stripped down to the raw nerve; Leeās emotions are the orchestra here. The listener eavesdrops on a sonic journal of heartbreak. After losing his lady, his record label, and his country, Lee etches his woes to wax.
[[Release Description]]This is a group of songs about one lady⦠her name is not important⦠she knows who she wasā¦What is important is once she loved me very muchā¦These songs are a truthful attempt to show the effect the loss of this love had on me⦠They are not all sad songs full of self pity and remorse⦠but more a mixture of good and hard time, old and new thought, lost and found feeling, and near and far places⦠There was no pleasure (as there usually is) in writing this album⦠there was only the dull āthudā of realization that something you once took for granted is gone⦠and those āblue eyesā will never again look through this āold grey curtaināā¦The lady is dead now and Iām still alive⦠doing the same things with others I once did with her⦠and maybe thatās what being alive is all about it⦠if it isnāt⦠āto hell with itā.
- Lee Hazlewood
āHe was a storyteller, thatās his music⦠the storytelling. Thatās the thing I fell in love with him for. This final story that we see, the Requiem story, is kind of looking back at a career, I think. Not just a relationshipāitās his story. I think itās authentic and the most revealing, really, because other things are cloaked, cloaked in romanticism, in a way. When you think of āSandā and āJose,ā āMy Autumnās Done Comeā and āSome Velvet Morningā⦠those are stories, theyāre stories you make up⦠theyāre fiction. This is a little closer to home, I think.ā -Suzi Jane Hokom.
Light in the Attic Records is proud to continue its Lee Hazlewood Archival Series with LHI Records final release. 1971ās Requiem for An Almost Lady is a personal statement and one of the heaviest break-up albums of all time. There are no lilting strings, sweeping choirs, or dancing trumpets. The arrangements are stripped down to the raw nerve; Leeās emotions are the orchestra here. The listener eavesdrops on a sonic journal of heartbreak. After losing his lady, his record label, and his country, Lee etches his woes to wax.
[[Selling Points]]- Album remastered from pristine LHI master tapes
- Includes outtake āIāve Just Learned to Runā and previously unreleased demo āLittle Birdā
- Liner notes by Hunter Lea including an interview with Suzi Jane Hokom
- LP housed in a deluxe gatefold Stoughton tip-on jacket
















