The Waterboys - Room to Roam (1990)
BAND/ARTIST: The Waterboys
- Title: Room to Roam
- Year Of Release: 1990
- Label: Spiddal House
- Genre: Rock
- Quality: APE (image+.cue,log,scans)
- Total Time: 41:21
- Total Size: 241 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. In Search of a Rose
02. Song from the End of the World
03. A Man Is in Love
04. Kaliope House
05. Bigger Picture
06. Natural Bridge Blues
07. Something that is Gone
08. The Star and the Sea
09. A Life of Sundays
10. Islandman
11. The Raggle Taggle Gypsy
12. How long Will I Love you_
13. Upon the Wind and Waves
14. Spring Comes to Spiddal
15. The Trip to Broadford
16. Further up, Further in
17. Room to Roam
18. Untitled
01. In Search of a Rose
02. Song from the End of the World
03. A Man Is in Love
04. Kaliope House
05. Bigger Picture
06. Natural Bridge Blues
07. Something that is Gone
08. The Star and the Sea
09. A Life of Sundays
10. Islandman
11. The Raggle Taggle Gypsy
12. How long Will I Love you_
13. Upon the Wind and Waves
14. Spring Comes to Spiddal
15. The Trip to Broadford
16. Further up, Further in
17. Room to Roam
18. Untitled
The Waterboys' departure from the self-described "big music" of the early to mid-'80s into the more pastoral Celtic folk-rock landscapes of Fisherman's Blues frustrated many longtime fans who thought that the group belonged in the same arenas as contemporaries like U2 or the Alarm, but it also brought in a new set of listeners who were looking for a young Fairport Convention or Steeleye Span. Taking its name from a passage in Scottish author, poet, and minister George MacDonald' fantasy novel Phantastes: A Faerie Romance for Men and Women, Room to Roam extends the scope of the group's previous effort by integrating that album's Irish and Scottish folk elements further into the rock and pop nether regions. If anything, Room to Roam captures head (and soon to be only) Waterboy Mike Scott at his most unabashedly Beatlesque, stringing together whispery interludes, pub-style jam sessions (of the traditional folk variety), sound effects, and genre-defying forays into soul ("Something That Is Gone"), country ("How Long Will I Love You?"), traditional folk ("Raggle Taggle Gypsy"), and full-on rock & roll ("Life of Sundays") -- the latter cut even dissolves into a group singalong of the Fab Four classic "Yellow Submarine." Of the two albums, Room to Roam balances these two worlds the most effectively, and while the more focused and nuanced Fisherman's Blues is the superior record, it lacks Roam's amiable, schizophrenic, and pioneering spirit.
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