- 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. Koeeoaddi There | 4:46 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 2. The Minotaur's Song | 3:17 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 3. Witches Hat | 2:30 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 4. A Very Cellular Song | 13:00 | Album Only | ||
| Play | 5. Mercy I Cry City | 2:41 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 6. Waltz Of The New Moon | 5:07 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 7. The Water Song | 2:47 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 8. Three Is A Green Crown | 7:40 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 9. Swift As The Wind | 4:48 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 10. Nightfall | 2:30 | £0.69 |
Product details
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The opening track 'Koeeoaddi There' encapsulates all of these qualities. Williamson tells an evocative tale of childhood, backed with melodic, inventive chord and tempo changes. 'The Minotour's Song' is a startling contrast of music hall and greek mtyhological lyrics, highlighting the ISB's influences. 'Witch's Hat' has a beautiful folk melody, again the song structure packed with incident. Mike Heron's 'A Very Cellular Song' begins as an old gospel hymn before it travels the world in its wonderful array of instruments, an early bridge between western music and world music in general. Heron's Dylanesque 'Mercy I Cry City' is a poetic rant against the unnatural prison of the urban landscape. 'Waltz Of The New Moon' harks back again to the Romantic poets in its ode to the wonders of the natural landscape. Here the harp sound is at once lilting and glorious. Like 'A Very Cellular Song', 'The Water Song' sings a hymn to the evolutionary power of the natural world using strange and unusual instruments to create the onomatopoeic sounds of water. The most Eastern-tinged of the tracks on the album is 'There Is A Green Crown' telling another tale of natural wonder that I can't help thinking would be frowned upon and scorned in today's irony-laden culture. On 'Swift As The Wind' Heron tells of how the grown-ups around him tried to make him give up his childhood imagination, something that has obviously remained with him throughout his musical career.
Williamson's 'Nightfall' closes this adorable album mixing Eastern sounds with the American south, prefiguring Ry Cooder by a number of years.
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