The Last of the True Believers is the fourth studio album by American singer and songwriter Nanci Griffith, released in 1986 by Philo Records. The acclaim accorded her from her previous album, Once in a Very Blue Moon, and this album earned her a contract with a major recording company. Here, Griffith continued her turn toward a more country-oriented work than her first two albums, which were primarily folk-sounding. It also includes two songs which were later hits for Kathy Mattea, "Love at the Five and Dime" from Walk the Way the Wind Blows (1986) and "Goin' Gone", her first number one, from Untasted Honey (1987).
Cover
The photograph on the album cover contains several references to the album's songs. A couple can be seen dancing behind Griffith standing in front of a Woolworth's store as described in "Love at the Five and Dime". The male dancer is Lyle Lovett, who also appears on the album as a vocalist. The man standing at far left is John T. Davis, at the time a music writer for the Austin American-Statesman.
As with other Griffith albums, she is pictured holding books by and/or about southern writers. On the front cover, she is holding a copy of The Kindness of Strangers: The Life of Tennessee Williams by Donald Spoto. On the back cover, she is clutching Lonesome Dove by Larry McMurtry.[4][5]
Pros and Cons Harmony Choir (Nanci Griffith, Marlin "Griff" Griffith, Richard Dobson, Robert Earl Keen, Lyle Lovett, Tom Russell) – harmony vocals on "St. Olav's Gate"
Rachel Peer Prine – harmony vocals on "More Than a Whisper"
Maura O'Connell – harmony vocals on "Banks of the Pontchartrain"
Curtis Allen – harmony vocals on "Fly By Night"
Gove Scrivenor – autoharp on "Goin' Gone"
Robin Batteau – violin on "The Wing and The Wheel"
Track listing and personnel from the album's liner notes.[1]
References
^ abThe Last of the True Believers (liner notes). Nanci Griffith. Philco. 1986. PH-1109.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)