Duke Special - Songs from the Deep Forest (2CD Limited Edition) (2006)

  • 31 Aug, 09:17
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Artist:
Title: Songs from the Deep Forest
Year Of Release: 2006
Label: V2
Genre: Pop Rock, Indie Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3 320 Kbps
Total Time: 01:29:02
Total Size: 603 / 229 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

CD 1
1 Wake Up Scarlett 3:23
2 Everybody Wants A Little Something 3:08
3 Brixton Leaves 4:26
4 Our Love Goes Deeper Than This 3:30
5 Freewheel 3:55
6 No Cover Up 3:47
7 Portrait 3:07
8 Last Night I Nearly Died 3:48
9 Ballad Of A Broken Man 3:10
10 Salvation Tambourine 3:54
11 Something Might Happen 3:12
12 Slip Of A Girl 3:17
13 This Could Be My Last Day 3:52

CD 2
1 Overture (BBC Live Version) 3:45
2 Brixton Leaves (BBC Live Version) 5:43
3 Last Night I Nearly Died (BBC Live Version) 4:11
4 Portrait (BBC Live Version) 3:21
5 Wake Up Scarlett (BBC Live Version) 3:48
6 Regarding The Moonlight In Eastbourne (BBC Live Version) 3:53
7 Salvation Tambourine (BBC Live Version) 5:03
8 No Cover Up (BBC Live Version) 4:29
9 I Let You Down (BBC Live Version) 3:51
10 Freewheel (BBC Live Version) 4:49

When Badly Drawn Boy debuted in the late '90s, listeners were forced to reconcile his craftsmanlike songs and heavenly voice with someone who looked like he lived at the bus station. Duke Special is a similar case. He's an eye-shadowed, dreadlocked singer/songwriter with a taste for vaudeville (its performers and its fashion) who could, nevertheless, be safely taken under the wing of any James Blunt fan. (Admittedly, hanging posters on the bedroom wall would be another story.) What's more important to know about Duke Special is that he's a Belfast boy, and there's something specifically Irish about how he wears his sincerity with no hint of irony or shame, and how his pop-orchestral arrangements, occasionally bombastic, work surprisingly well because of that sincerity (especially considering his wealth of up-again/down-again relationship songs). He's also a fine songwriter, channeling Van Morrison and Tom Waits, but also balancing sentiments that anyone can relate to with over-specific facts that bring his songs back into heavy personalization. The melodies are perhaps not tight enough for true commercial crossover, and conversely too broad for underground appeal, but Duke Special's unique persona goes a long way toward papering over those small concerns.




  • whiskers
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