Bill Fay - Bill Fay [1970][FLAC]
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- Audio > FLAC
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- 18
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- 202.82 MiB (212667752 Bytes)
- Tag(s):
- Folk
- Uploaded:
- 2014-07-14 12:05 GMT
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- dickspic
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- Info Hash: 352EB00B466680A505BABADF14E5B28CC5486AF8
FLAC / Lossless / Log (100%) / Cue Label/Cat#: Eclectic / ECLCD 1022 / + Bonus Tracks Country:USA Year: February 21, 2006 Genre: folk Format: CD, Album, [b] 01. Garden Song 02. The Sun Is Bored 03. We Want You To Stay 04. Narrow Way 05. We Have Laid Here 06. Sing Us One of Your Songs May 07. Gentle Willie 08. Methane River 09. The Room 10. Goodnight Stan 11. Cannons Plain 12. Be Not So Fearful 13. Down To The Bridge Signed to Decca Records in 1967, Fay took three years to assemble the songs for his initial, eponymous album. The recording sessions, by contrast, were completed in a single day, under the guidance of first-time arranger Mike Gibbs and with the support of a twenty-seven-piece orchestra. The interplay between Gibbs’ bright, lush instrumental arrangements and Fay’s measured chording on piano and frail, modest vocals reinforces the recording’s constant vacillation between hopeful reassurance and utter dissatisfaction with modern life. In the opening tune, “Garden Song,” Fay announces that he has planted himself in a garden to escape from the senseless distractions of the modern world and to develop real, “lasting relations” with nature. His communal bliss is short-lived, however, as he relates in song after song the intrusions of violence and alienation into the most isolated frontiers of personal solitude. Even nature itself has become dissatisfied, unhappy, and desperate to escape the current situation. “And the moon is praying,” Fay relates in “The Sun Is Bored.” “It wants to get away to some other place. Any place.” In the midst of his bleakest observations, Fay continues to hope, and urges his listeners to do the same. “Be not so nervous; be not so frail,” he counsels in “Be Not So Fearful,” the album’s penultimate tune. “Someone watches over you; you will not fail.” Whether the “someone” in question is God, nature or the wise, benevolent singer himself remained open to debate—at least until his next recording