Paul Stephenson - Light Green Ball (2002)
Artist: Paul Stephenson
Title: Light Green Ball
Year Of Release: 2002
Label: Stockfisch Records
Genre: Folk, Country, Singer-Songwriter
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 48:56
Total Size: 172/380 Mb (scans)
WebSite: Album Preview
Title: Light Green Ball
Year Of Release: 2002
Label: Stockfisch Records
Genre: Folk, Country, Singer-Songwriter
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 48:56
Total Size: 172/380 Mb (scans)
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Underground
02. No Lie
03. Sushi Now
04. Maybe Today
05. Going To Martinique
06. The Man Is A Fool
07. Heaven On Earth
08. Monn In The Glass
09. If You Want My Love
10. The Way To Santiago
11. Man Of Some Wisdom
12. As Long As The River
13. Nightingale Song
Paul Stephenson in his own words:
"The story of my life: I grew up in the northeast of England and my first musical heroes were the Beatles. I'm still a fan of McCartney's songs and Lennon's granny glasses. My other big hero is James Taylor. JT runs like a golden thread through my friends in musical circles (including the acoustic guitar world's best-kept secret, Chris Jones) and my musical taste - he was first produced by McCartney, worked with lots of the other great American songwriters of the 1960s and 70s and has another big fan from the northeast of England called Sting (the nearest I have to a third musical hero). I learned to play the guitar listening to my heroes plus Simon & Garfunkel, Dylan and, from this side of the Atlantic, Ralp McTell and other folkies.
I set out for Amsterdam and Europe in 1979 to make a living of sorts from music. I played mostly in bars and youth centres, with the occasional festival or concert and appearances on radio and (once) television. I played in duos, trios and bands, and made recordings whenever I could in whatever circumstances I could afford with whichever musicians I could round up for love of music, dressing my songs up in all kinds of usually ill-fitting clothes.
But mostly I played solo, and my most popular recording was completely solo, just a guitar and a voice ( "A Bend In The Road", release on CD in 1991). I changed my name to Tom Zola for that recording, after the two great ninteenth-century novelists Thomas Hardy and Emile Zola. TZ was Paul stephenson after he'd got through the daily grind of the daytime job and getting the kids from school and had time to dream a little.
Well, it was a long dream ...
I moved to France a few years ago, and work as a translator. These days, I dream mostly in a corner of the bedroom where I keep my elementary and ageing recording equipment, which I used to finally dress up my songs in comfortable clothes. Gunter Pauler, at Stockfisch Records, got to hear them and I have the feeling that the album he's about to produce is the place I've been heading for all this time..."
"The story of my life: I grew up in the northeast of England and my first musical heroes were the Beatles. I'm still a fan of McCartney's songs and Lennon's granny glasses. My other big hero is James Taylor. JT runs like a golden thread through my friends in musical circles (including the acoustic guitar world's best-kept secret, Chris Jones) and my musical taste - he was first produced by McCartney, worked with lots of the other great American songwriters of the 1960s and 70s and has another big fan from the northeast of England called Sting (the nearest I have to a third musical hero). I learned to play the guitar listening to my heroes plus Simon & Garfunkel, Dylan and, from this side of the Atlantic, Ralp McTell and other folkies.
I set out for Amsterdam and Europe in 1979 to make a living of sorts from music. I played mostly in bars and youth centres, with the occasional festival or concert and appearances on radio and (once) television. I played in duos, trios and bands, and made recordings whenever I could in whatever circumstances I could afford with whichever musicians I could round up for love of music, dressing my songs up in all kinds of usually ill-fitting clothes.
But mostly I played solo, and my most popular recording was completely solo, just a guitar and a voice ( "A Bend In The Road", release on CD in 1991). I changed my name to Tom Zola for that recording, after the two great ninteenth-century novelists Thomas Hardy and Emile Zola. TZ was Paul stephenson after he'd got through the daily grind of the daytime job and getting the kids from school and had time to dream a little.
Well, it was a long dream ...
I moved to France a few years ago, and work as a translator. These days, I dream mostly in a corner of the bedroom where I keep my elementary and ageing recording equipment, which I used to finally dress up my songs in comfortable clothes. Gunter Pauler, at Stockfisch Records, got to hear them and I have the feeling that the album he's about to produce is the place I've been heading for all this time..."