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Ernie Graham - Ernie Graham (Japan Remastered ) (1971/2014)

Ernie Graham - Ernie Graham (Japan Remastered ) (1971/2014)

BAND/ARTIST: Ernie Graham

  • Title: Ernie Graham
  • Year Of Release: 1971/2014
  • Label: Parlophone
  • Genre: Folk Rock, Pub Rock
  • Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
  • Total Time: 40:36
  • Total Size: 184/352 Mb (scans)
  • WebSite:
Ernie Graham - Ernie Graham (Japan Remastered ) (1971/2014)


Tracklist:

1. Sebastian - 5:34
2. So Lonely - 3:30
3. Sea Fever - 4:54
4. The Girl That Turned The Lever - 6:16
5. For A Little While 6:36
6. Blues To Snowy - 4:01
7. Don´t Want Me Round You - 4:32
8. Belfast - 5:13

Line-up::
Ernie Graham - Guitar, Vocals
Bob Andrews - Guitar, Keyboards, Vocals
Dave Charles - Drums, Vocals
C. Cunningham - Fiddle, Violin
J. Eichler - Vocals
Ian Gomm - Guitar, Vocals
Nick Lowe - Bass, Vocals
Malcolm Morley - Guitar, Piano, Vocals
Billy Rankin - Drums
Brinsley Schwarz - Guitar
Richard Treece - Guitar
Ken Whaley - Bass

This is one of the most hauntingly beautiful solo albums to come out of the whole English pub rock scene, and references to Bob Dylan and the Band are appropriate because the rootsy/folk-like intersections with their work are here. It's also a rival to the best work of Brinsley Schwarz, Ducks Deluxe, Eggs Over Easy, et al. (and no surprise -- the Brinsleys played on this album). Opening with the gorgeous, Dylanesque "Sebastian," built on a lyrical acoustic guitar part, Graham reveals himself a songwriter and player of extraordinary sensitivity -- he might easily have been another Alan Hull, or even bigger than that, had he been able to join a band with legs or hold his own career together. As it is, from that Dylan-like start, he and the Brinsleys deliver a brace of full electric numbers that rival the classic sound of the Band, starting with "So Lonely" -- the roots rock sound here is so authentically American that it will fool lots of listeners about its origins and source. For this album, "The Girl That Turned the Lever" and "For a Little While" are two of the finest working-class/folk-style compositions this side of "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down," and "Blues to Snowy" takes Graham into Lynyrd Skynyrd territory. "Belfast" finally takes listeners to Graham's real roots, in a bracing, fiddle-driven folk-based piece from that side of the Atlantic.



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  • User offline
  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 00:28
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Many Thanks
  • User offline
  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 15:33
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Many thanks for lossless.