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Marc Brierley - Welcome To The Citadel (Remastered) (1968/2014)

Marc Brierley - Welcome To The Citadel (Remastered) (1968/2014)

BAND/ARTIST: Marc Brierley

Marc Brierley - Welcome To The Citadel (Remastered) (1968/2014)


Tracklist:

1. The Answer Is - 2:23
2. Vagabond Of Sleep - 4:17
3. Matchbox Men - 3:25
4. Over The Hills - 2:05
5. Symphony - 2:51
6. Take Me For A Ride On Your Aeroplane - 2:04
7. Welcome To The Citadel - 4:34
8. Hold On, Hold On, The Garden Sure Looks Good Spread Out On The Floor - 3:38
9. Autograph Of Time - After All The Heat Was Hung - 1:35
10.Sunlight Sleepers Song - 1:26
11.Making Love - 1:22
12.Time Itself - 2:34
13.And Who Would But Think - 2:04
14.Thoughts And Sounds - 6:11

Bonus Tracks:
15.A Time For Love - 3:15
16.Dragonfly - 2:20
17.Arctic City - 1:45
18.Rel's Song - 4:20
19.If You Leave Me Now - 3:01
20.Stay A Little Longer Merry Ann - 2:49
21.Flaxen Hair - 2:58
22.Godspeed - 4:34
23.Phoenix - 3:16
24.Powers Of Glory - 5:14
25.Hear Me Calling - 2:21
26.Don't Let The Bugs Bite - 2:47

Line-up::
Marc Brierley - Acoustic Guitar, Vocals
Clare Lowther - Cello
Mike Travis - Drums, Percussion
Tony Reeves - Electric Bass
Henry Lowther - Trumpet, Violin

Although Marc Brierley had released an EP on Transatlantic in 1966, 1968's Welcome to the Citadel was the British folkie's first album. It was an accomplished yet rather bland work, built around Brierley's singing, songwriting, and acoustic guitar. But it was also pushed a little toward folk-rock and pop by the use of electric bass and drums (by Tony Reeves and Mike Travis, who'd just been touring with John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers), as well as some cello, trumpet, and violins. It's on the mild and twee side of British folk-rock; Brierley's slight vocals and drifting compositional sense fall in the realm of other minor British singer/songwriters of the genre like Keith Christmas. Observational sketches like "Matchbox Men" and the title track have an attractive but forgettable baroque-folk flavor; other numbers like "Take Me for a Ride on Your Aeroplane" seem a little like forced attempts at getting an electric Bert Jansch-type sound; and more acoustic-based numbers mine the dreamy folk-pop espoused by numerous British troubadours from Donovan on down. It's a varied album, but you could get roughly similar stuff elsewhere by performers of far greater distinction. The entire album has been reissued on the Brierley compilation Autograph of Time, which also includes his second album (^1969's Hello), his 1966 EP, and couple of non-LP singles.


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  • User offline
  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 14:05
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Many Thanks
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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 18:57
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Many thanks for lossless!