- Two MP3 Albums for £10. Buy this and one other MP3 Album from a great selection for no more than £10. Here's how (terms and conditions apply)
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Two MP3 albums for £10
Buy this MP3 album with any other MP3 album under £8 and pay no more than £10 for both (terms and conditions apply). Just look for any album with this message, put it in your basket with another eligible title and the discount will be applied at checkout. |
| Song Title | Time | Price | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Play | 1. The Yew Tree | 5:08 | £0.89 | ||
| Play | 2. Florence In Florence | 2:31 | £0.89 | ||
| Play | 3. Dowie Dens O' Yarrow | 5:57 | £0.89 | ||
| Play | 4. Tom Joad | 5:38 | £0.89 | ||
| Play | 5. Outlaws And Dreamers | 4:18 | £0.89 | ||
| Play | 6. When I'm Gone | 3:43 | £0.89 | ||
| Play | 7. John Harrison's Hands | 5:14 | £0.89 | ||
| Play | 8. What You Do With What You Got | 3:18 | £0.89 | ||
| Play | 9. Tom Paine's Bones | 3:45 | £0.89 | ||
| Play | 10. Strong Women Rule Us All With Their Tears | 6:38 | £0.89 | ||
| Play | 11. Wild Roses | 4:01 | £0.89 |
Product details
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This man is wonderful musician and I'm glad I came across his work.
The song itself or the music of itself is always foremost with Gaughan, and he seeks to live within the lyrics as fully as possible, be it his affinity for Woody Guthrie, Phil Ochs or Si Kahn, or his own Scots Nationalist convictions. Accompanied by the remarkable Brian McNeil, who has authored several on the songs on this disc, the music is uncluttered and all the more dramatic in its effect as a result. The production, handled by Gaughan, is clean, clear and puts the music front and center. This is extraordinarily well crafted.
But is it "Handful of Earth"? No. How could anything be? That album set standards that all by themselves assured Gaughan's reputation and notched his contribution to music, and to Scots music in particular, for all time. "Handful" was brilliant start to finish. "Outlaws" isn't quite "Sail On" or even "Redwood Cathedrals," yet is entirely worth repeated and rewarding listens for the sheer power Gaughan brings to his craft. Even a rather weak tune like "Wild Roses" achieves a dynamic that it does not really command on its own. I am not sure this is a tune worthy of Gaughan, and certainly, it finishes the CD on a less than compelling note. Without Gaughan, it is just another tepid effort from an American singer-songwhiner.
But this is a minor quibble, and perhaps others love this track. The more important thing is that Gaughan remains a force to be reckoned with and continues to speak and sing and play with a conviction that puts every one on notice that music and the power it commands demands all you have. Gaughan never delivers anything less.
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