June Tabor - A Quiet Eye (1999)

  • 16 Jun, 15:41
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Artist:
Title: A Quiet Eye
Year Of Release: 1999
Label: Topic Records
Genre: Folk, Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3 320 Kbps
Total Time: 58:52
Total Size: 334 Mb / 150 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. The Gardener 5:20
2. A Place Called England 4:41
3. I Will Put My Ship In Order 6:08
4. I'll Be Seeing You 4:02
5. Out Of Winter / Waltzing's For Dreamers 5:54
6. Pharaoh 6:00
7. Must I Be Bound? 5:02
8. The Writing Of Tipperary / It's A Long Way To Tipperary 9:37
9. The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face 3:09
10. The Water Is Wide / St Agnes / Jeannie And Jamie 8:38

Bass Clarinet, Clarinet – Iain Dixon
Cello – Richard Bolton
Clarinet, Alto Saxophone – Andy Schofield
Clarinet, Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone – Mark Lockheart
Double Bass – Dudley Philips*
French Horn – Jim Rattigan
Percussion – Roy Dodds
Piano – Huw Warren
Trombone – Liam Kirkman, Mark Bassey
Trumpet – Richard Iles
Tuba – Richard Fox
Viola, Violin – Mark Emerson
Vocals – June Tabor

As June Tabor ages her voice seems, paradoxically, to become clearer and sharper. She is also becoming increasingly interested in expanding her repertoire beyond the traditional British and Irish folk music on which her early career was built. There are no fiddles or guitars on this album; instead there are Huw Warren's piano and the Creative Jazz Orchestra, a big band complete with French horn and two trombones. So has she finally crossed the line that separates a mere singer from a chanteuse? Not yet, thankfully. While one of these songs does come from a musical, a plurality of them (including such standbys as "The Water Is Wide" and "I Will Put My Ship in Order") are traditional, and there are two Richard Thompson covers ("Waltzing's for Dreamers" and "Pharaoh") and a fine version of Ewan MacColl's immortal "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face." The big-band arrangements are surprisingly effective, especially on the Maggie Holland composition "A Place Called England" and on the dour "Pharaoh." Not everyone will prefer this album to her earlier work, but Tabor herself has never sounded better.





  • whiskers
  •  16:35
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Many Thanks
  • hollinsuk
  •  03:06
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MANY THANKS FOR 320 KBPS

Cheers.
  • mufty77
  •  03:45
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Many thanks for lossless.