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  1. Storyville is Robbie Robertson's second solo album. It is focused on the famous jazz homeland section of New Orleans and on that part of the South in general. He contributed one song ("Breakin' the Rules") to Wim Wenders ' soundtrack to his 1991 film, Until the End of the World .

  2. Sep 30, 1991 · However, this is a modern Robbie Robertson album, and the sleek production of "Hold Back the Dawn" and "What About Now" creates an ambient, atmospheric music that often sounds like a hallucination. "Soap Box Preacher," with Neil Young on backing vocals, nicely assimilates its horn section.

  3. Nov 14, 1991 · In Robbie Robertson's 1991 interview with Rolling Stone, the singer talks about the inspiration behind 'Storyville' and living with Martin Scorsese.

  4. Sep 29, 1991 · Storyville was a notorious New Orleans party district that flourished in the early 1900s. ”Storyville,” the album, follows two lovers on their separate journeys across America, but...

  5. Sep 29, 1991 · It’s no surprise Robertson would name his second solo album after a historic section of New Orleans famed for sensual and ritualistic pursuits. Mixing the earthy and ethereal is the ex-Band ...

  6. The album is conceptual, roughing out a story over ten songs set in New Orleans' legendary turn-of-the-century Storyville red-light district. Coproduced by Robertson, Stephen Hague, and Gary Gersh, the record was recorded in New Orleans with members of the Neville Brothers, Mardi Gras Indians, the Meters, and the Zion Harmonizers.

  7. Robbie Robertson is the solo debut album by Canadian rock musician Robbie Robertson, released in 1987. Though Robertson had been a professional musician since the late 1950s, notably a founder of and primary songwriter for The Band, this was his first solo album.

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