Squeeze - Play (1991)

  • 09 Nov, 07:13
  • change text size:

Artist:
Title: Play
Year Of Release: 1991
Label: Reprise Records
Genre: Rock, Alt Rock, New Wave, Soul
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 52:25
Total Size: 127/345 Mb
WebSite:

Squeeze - Play (1991)


Tracklist:

01. Satisfied
02. Crying In My Sleep
03. Letting Go
04. The Day I Get Home
05. The Truth
06. House Of Love
07. Cupid's Toy
08. Gone To The Dogs
09. Walk A Straight Line
10. Sunday Street
11. Wicked And Cruel
12. There Is A Voice

Line-up:
Chris Difford – guitar, backing vocals
Gilson Lavis – drums
Glenn Tilbrook – guitars, keyboards, lead & backing vocals
Keith Wilkinson – bass, backing vocals
with:
Tony Berg – keyboards, guitars
Bruce Hornsby – accordion
Matt Irving – keyboards
Steve Nieve – keyboards
Claudia Fontaine, Beverly Skeete – backing vocals on 4, 10
Laurence Johnson, Paul Lee – backing vocals on 7
Betsy Petrie, Blanche Black, Christopher Guest, Gabriele Morgan, Mary Jo Braun, Michael McKean, Michael Penn, Steven Soles, Wendie Colter – choir on 4
Jerry Hey, Bill Reichenbach, Dan Higgins, Gary Grant, Larry Williams – horns
Arme Garabedian, Berj Garabedian, Joel Derouin, John Acevedo, Larry Corbet, Bob Becker, Sid Page, Suzie Katayama – strings

One of Squeeze's most mature and thoughtful albums, 1991's Play might be a bit pretentious in spots -- the liner notes are written out as a theatre script, with the songs laid out as dialogue -- but it's probably Squeeze's best post-reunion album. Shorn of the misguided experiments of Cosi Fan Tutti Frutti and the naked chart ambitions of Babylon and On and Frank, Play is a simple and low-key collection of songs charting (loosely; this is less of a concept album than many reviews claimed at the time) the dissolution of a love affair. Reduced to a quartet by Jools Holland's departure for a career as a BBC television presenter (the group's South London homeboy Steve Nieve, tour keyboardist Matt Irving, and more implausibly, Bruce Hornsby provide the keyboards), the group play with a loose, R&B-inflected casualness. Producer Tony Berg, unfortunately, occasionally obscures that character by drowning the songs in strings and mass backing vocals (including special appearances by Michael Penn, Wendie Colter, and Spinal Tap's Michael McKean and Christopher Guest!), but the Difford/Tilbrook songs are mostly strong enough to withstand the onslaught. "The Truth" and the downcast "Walk a Straight Line" are particular highlights.


  • mufty77
  •  09:38
  • Пользователь offline
    • Нравится
    • 0
Many thanks for lossless.