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Billy Bragg - William Bloke (2CD) (2006)

Billy Bragg - William Bloke (2CD) (2006)

BAND/ARTIST: Billy Bragg

  • Title: William Bloke
  • Year Of Release: 1996 (2006)
  • Label: Cooking Vinyl
  • Genre: Rock, Folk Rock
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3 320 Kbps
  • Total Time: 01:20:06
  • Total Size: 508 / 206 Mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

CD 1
1. From Red to Blue 03:20
2. Upfield 04:06
3. Everybody Loves You Babe 03:09
4. Sugardaddy 04:37
5. A Pict Song 04:55
6. Brickbat 03:14
7. The Space Race Is Over 04:26
8. Northern Industrial Town 02:58
9. The Fourteenth of February 03:26
10. King James (Alternative Version) 03:21
11. Goalhanger 03:46

CD 2
1. As Long as You Hold Me (Demo) 03:25
2. Who's Gonna Shoe Your Pretty Little Feet? (Demo) 01:42
3. Sugar Daddy (Demo) 04:07
4. The Space Race Is Over (Demo) 05:09
5. Goalhanger (Demo) 02:42
6. Upfield (Demo) 05:03
7. The Fourteenth of February (Demo) 03:25
8. Qualifications 01:48
9. Never Had No One Ever 03:40
10. Thatcherites 04:13
11. All Fall Down 03:34

Billy Bragg took a five-year break from recording (and became a parent for the first time) after releasing 1991's Don't Try This at Home, but William Bloke suggests he still wasn't ready to get back to work when he returned to the studio. William Bloke was Bragg's sparest and most musically concise album since Talking with the Taxman About Poetry, and beyond the upbeat and horn-fueled "Upfield" and the loopy ska of the set closer, "Goalhanger," most of the songs feature little besides Billy's voice and guitar (or in the case of "Everybody Loves You Babe," Billy's voice and a piano). More striking, however, is the downbeat tone of the album; from the philosophical uncertainty of "From Red to Blue," the loss of innocence of "The Space Race Is Over," and the crumbling relationship of "Brickbat," William Bloke sounds like the work of a man somewhat overwhelmed by the world around him and not sure what to do about it -- which is not the way Billy Bragg usually sounds. While the piss-and-vinegar adaptation of Rudyard Kipling's "A Pict Song" and the cheerful wrath of "Goalhanger" indicate the old Billy wasn't gone for good, there's a lingering air of defeat and dashed hopes that permeates William Bloke, and the songs lack the generosity and rabble-rousing brio of his best work. Bragg would rally two years later with his excellent adaptation of unpublished Woody Guthrie lyrics, Mermaid Avenue, but William Bloke is the work of a man stuck in a creative rut, and while there are still things worth hearing here, they're outnumbered by songs that speak more of Bragg's personal disappointments than his muse.




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  • User offline
  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 15:52
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Many thanks
  • User offline
  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 17:38
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Many thanks for Flac.