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Stone Alone
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Stone Alone
Stone Alone is the second solo studio album by the English rock musician Bill Wyman, released on 27 February 1976 by Rolling Stones Records. The album reached No. 166 on the US Billboard 200.
Van Morrison plays saxophone in "A Quarter to Three". Joe Walsh, Dr. John, Ronnie Wood, Al Kooper, Nicky Hopkins, and Jim Keltner played on the album.
Bill Wyman is also the author of a book called Stone Alone: The Story of a Rock 'n' Roll Band (1990), not to be confused with this album.
In a retrospective review, Donald Guarisco of AllMusic rated the album one and a half stars out of five. He noted "Apache Woman" and "Quarter to Three" but cautioned that "highlights like these are few and far between and this problem reduces Stone Alone to a curio that should only be sought out by Bill Wyman fans and Rolling Stones completists." He criticized the album for lacking "the focus and solid songs of the previous album and ends up feeling like the typical rock star's ego-trip side project. Stone Alone can't be faulted for ambition, though: nearly every song tries out a different musical style ('50s-style rock, disco, and reggae) and Wyman enlists a veritable who's who of guest musicians (everyone from Dr. John to Al Kooper to Joe Walsh) to bring the songs to life."
All tracks are written by Bill Wyman, except where noted.
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Stone Alone
Stone Alone is the second solo studio album by the English rock musician Bill Wyman, released on 27 February 1976 by Rolling Stones Records. The album reached No. 166 on the US Billboard 200.
Van Morrison plays saxophone in "A Quarter to Three". Joe Walsh, Dr. John, Ronnie Wood, Al Kooper, Nicky Hopkins, and Jim Keltner played on the album.
Bill Wyman is also the author of a book called Stone Alone: The Story of a Rock 'n' Roll Band (1990), not to be confused with this album.
In a retrospective review, Donald Guarisco of AllMusic rated the album one and a half stars out of five. He noted "Apache Woman" and "Quarter to Three" but cautioned that "highlights like these are few and far between and this problem reduces Stone Alone to a curio that should only be sought out by Bill Wyman fans and Rolling Stones completists." He criticized the album for lacking "the focus and solid songs of the previous album and ends up feeling like the typical rock star's ego-trip side project. Stone Alone can't be faulted for ambition, though: nearly every song tries out a different musical style ('50s-style rock, disco, and reggae) and Wyman enlists a veritable who's who of guest musicians (everyone from Dr. John to Al Kooper to Joe Walsh) to bring the songs to life."
All tracks are written by Bill Wyman, except where noted.
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