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Cliff Aungier - The Lady from Baltimore (2003)

Cliff Aungier - The Lady from Baltimore (2003)

BAND/ARTIST: Cliff Aungier

  • Title: The Lady from Baltimore
  • Year Of Release: 2003
  • Label: Castle Communications
  • Genre: Singer-Songwriter, Folk Rock
  • Quality: mp3 320 kbps / flac lossless (tracks)
  • Total Time: 00:38:04
  • Total Size: 96 / 250 mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist

01. The Lady from Baltimore
02. Back On the Road
03. Wild About My Loving
04. Words
05. She Needs Me
06. Beet Routes
07. The Same Sad Things
08. Morning of My Life
09. My Love and I
10. Road to Rio
11. Bluesleeves
12. Down Along the Cove
13. One Too Many Mornings
14. Good, Good


The Lady from Baltimore was singer/songwriter Cliff Aungier's sole full-length contribution to the '60s British folk movement. Despite making a name for himself in the pub/folk/blues scene, his popularity never reached the heights of fellow scenesters like Bert Jansch and Ralph McTell. Castle's reissue of this long out of print debut begins with the Tim Hardin-penned title track, a rich slice of sunshine pop disguised as a lament, then proceeds to steer the listener through a lush vista of serpentine string arrangements and flawless fingerpicking. Aungier's (and/or the record label's) cover choices are obviously geared toward breaking him into the orchestral pop movement. "Words" and "Morning of My Life," written by the Bee Gees (the then undisputed kings of the scene) and the inclusion of two Bob Dylan songs - "Down Along the Cove" and "One Too Many Mornings" - contain all of the flowery pomp one would expect from a Pye release. The revelation here is Aungier's remarkable voice and consistently mesmerizing abilities on the six-string. Like a British version of Tompall Glaser, he treats the covers with respect and the originals with an outlaw intensity that makes one wish he had just packed everything in a valise and relocated himself to Memphis. You can almost here the "train a comin'," barreling through a night thick with string sections on the raucous "Back on the Road" - Aungier may be along for the ride, but he's gonna rob it halfway through. It's this battle between pop and back-porch blues that makes the record such a great listen. From the blistering folk/blues of "Good Good," a non-LP 45 that features the sultry crooning of Anita Harris, Madeline Bell, and Dusty Springfield, to an intricate spin on a holiday classic, "Bluesleeves," The Lady From Baltimore is that rarest of reissues - absolutely necessary.




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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 19:43
    • Like
    • 0
Many thanks for lossless!!!