<P> According to his former wife Carla, who discouraged visitors: "He was just stalling for time . Maybe some new project would suddenly happen, but I knew he'd crossed the line as far as the record business went ." His next album, North and South, was released in 1988 . In an interview that year with Colin Irwin to promote the album, Rafferty mentioned that he was interested in doing more production work, writing film soundtracks, and even floated the idea of writing a musical about the life of Robert Louis Stevenson . Reviews of the album were mixed . In The Times, critic David Sinclair was particularly scathing: "On North and South, it sounds as if he has thumbed a lift up the road to a mock - Texan bar somewhere in his native Scotland . There is a mid-Atlantic blandness lurking behind the rococo roots veneer ." </P> <P> In the early 1990s, Rafferty recorded a cover version of the Bob Dylan song "The Times They Are a-Changin"' with Barbara Dickson, who had contributed backing vocals to both City to City and Night Owl . The track appeared on Dickson's albums Don't Think Twice It's All Right (1992) and The Barbara Dickson Collection (2006). </P> <P> Rafferty released two further albums in the 1990s in what musician Tom Robinson later described as "a major return to form". On a Wing and a Prayer (1992) reunited him with his Stealers Wheel partner Egan on several tracks . It included three tracks cowritten with Rafferty's brother Jim, also a singer - songwriter, who had been signed to Decca Records in the 1970s . Rafferty recorded a new version of his Humblebums song "Her Father Didn't Like Me Anyway" on the album Over My Head (1994). These were the last two records Rafferty produced with Hugh Murphy, who died in 1998 . According to guitarist Hugh Burns, Murphy's death was "a great blow to Gerry" and marked the end of a creative partnership that had lasted almost 30 years . </P> <P> By the end of the 1990s, new technology enabled Rafferty to distance himself even further from the conventional approach of the music industry and work entirely on his own terms . Now based in London, he employed sound engineer Giles Twigg to assemble a Digidesign mobile recording studio and, with Twigg's help, recorded the album Another World in London, Scotland, Barbados, France, and Italy with collaborators from previous albums, including Hugh Burns, Mark Knopfler, Kenny Craddock, and Mo Foster . Through his company Icon Music, Rafferty promoted and sold the album independently on a website (www.gerryrafferty.com) created specifically for the purpose . </P>

Who wrote her father didn't like me anyway
find me the text answering this question