Magna Carta - Midnight Blue / Live And Let Live (Deluxe Edition) (2023)

  • 04 Aug, 06:34
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Artist:
Title: Midnight Blue / Live And Let Live (Deluxe Edition)
Year Of Release: 2010 / 2023
Label: Cherry Red Records
Genre: Folk Rock, Progressive Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3
Total Time: 2:18:53
Total Size: 961 / 323 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

DISC 1

01. Slowbone Jones
02. Natural Lovin' Man
03. It's So Easy
04. Have A Nice Day
05. Sting Of The Gin
06. Wind On The Water
07. Written In The Wind
08. Midnight Blue
09. Danny
10. I'll Walk Mine
11. Strangers In The Land Of Ulysses
12. Cajun Cannonball
13. Little Bit Of My Heart
14. Highway To Spain (Bonus Track)
15. When All Is Said And Done (Bonus Track)
16. For The Gypsy (Bonus Track)
17. Greenfields (Bonus Track)
18. Stop Bringing Me Down (Bonus Track)
19. Everytime (Bonus Track)

DISC 2

01. Airport Song (Live)
02. Sponge (Live)
03. Abalone Sky/Banjo Man (Live)
04. Wind On The Water (Live)
05. Tomorrow Is A Long Time (Live)
06. Nine Pound Hammer (Live)
07. Sun Ain't Gonna Rise (Live)
08. Time For The Leaving (Live)
09. Call Me The Breeze (Live)
10. Only Road Home (Live)
11. Fields Of Eden (Live)
12. Slow Train To Nowhere (Live)

Recorded in 1980-1981, at a time when early-'70s folk heroes Magna Carta were forgotten even by their original (vociferous) fan club, Midnight Blue is a surprisingly pleasing album, one that overlooks all the odds that were stacked against it (just one original member, no deal to speak of, and a decade having elapsed since their last LP of note) to drift on the edges, instead, of the folk movement that was just beginning to push its way out of punk rock. Of course, it was another decade too early to truly take advantage of those currents, and the band was still firmly locked into the gears that ground around its original incarnations. But hindsight blesses the original album with a lot to be thankful for, while half a dozen bonus tracks continue the story through the next 20 years of outtakes. The second disc in this package is also dominated by those same two decades; although the subtitle insists listeners are in for a truly career-spanning live retrospective, all but two of the 12 songs ("Sponge" from 1971 and "Fields of Eden" from 2007) were recorded during the 1990s and early 2000s. That said, there is a timelessness to the set that illustrates why this band is still so adored, and the opening (2000) recounting of "Airport Song" is priceless. © Dave Thompson


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