Thin Lizzy - Vagabonds Kings Warriors Angels [4CD Box Set] (2001)
BAND/ARTIST: Thin Lizzy
- Title: Vagabonds Kings Warriors Angels
- Year Of Release: 2001
- Label: Mercury [556 495-2]
- Genre: Classic Rock, Hard Rock, Blues Rock
- Quality: 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks+cue, log, scans)
- Total Time: 5:07:23
- Total Size: 728 mb / 1.94 gb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Only a huge hit single in the mid-'70s saves Thin Lizzy from complete under-appreciation in the annals of seventies rock, the days which made the genre. 'The Boys Are Back in Town' was that single and has been re-interpreted umpteen times since by monster-mogul rock bands trying to recreate some of the balls and bravado which Lizzy became known for in the rock world. Perhaps the latest release of Lizzy material, "Vagabonds, Kings, Warriors, Angels" will help rectify the situation. Four CDs and a well-illustrated book make up the release, the largest such gathering of Lizzy material yet.
Ever beloved among the rock and heavy metal communities, with a passionately devoted motley of defenders (check out the plethora of Lizzy tribute bands and websites), Lizzy was formed in the late '60s by the Crumlin Cowboy, singer/songwriter/bassist Phil Lynott. Lynott stuck out in his home town, being one of the very few working class black youths about the pebble-dashed terraces of Crumlin, Dublin. Lynott it would appear graduated from the same school for lyricists as Bruce Springsteen, producing odes to romanticized working-class heroes. Cars, girls, cowboys and highways would feature large in early Lynott lyrics but, like Springsteen, he'd later dig into a social conscience and an acute consciousness of race.
Lynott was the charismatic, tall and good looking front to the Lizzy machine but the band's success was guaranteed by some great players. Never an instrumental genius himself, Lynott's soulful vocals were oiled by the the ferocious, twin-lead guitar attack by guitarists Brian Robertson and Scott Gorham. The songs on this collection feature the various figures who one time or another partnered Gorham after Robertson left: Gary Moore is the best known of these and one can see why when he plays and sings alongside Lynott on the slow-burning ballad 'Still In Love With You'. Brian Downey, meanwhile was the powerful and stylish drummer driving the Lizzy engine. It was a tight machine, well oiled and working well by the time 'The Boys Are Back In Town' saw the day, with the smell of an absolute monster off it.
Lynott turned out songs at a prodigious rate so that after the 1975 release of 'Fighting' the band was producing an album almost every year. 'Boys Are Back...' came off the Jailbreak album, an album which in particular drops clues as to the Lizzy formula for success. With power chords and that populist Springsteenesque blue collar credibility, the sensibilities of the songs are just right to create the made-for-radio tunes which would guarantee the Lizzy crew decades of new fans alongside healthy industry and press attention.
Lynott, the black man, was an anomaly in the Waspish world of hard rock. Much of his work was thus fed by a sense of alienation, a feeling felt by an idol of his, Jimmy Hendrix. Lynott suffused his songs with images of the lone ranger, the romantic guy coming from the other side of the tracks, the jailbreaker, the downtrodden underdog. A genuinely artistic nature and a huge capacity to observe were what fed his flighty lyrical impulses and wishes for literary significance that didn't often work out. But watching Lynott open a show or charm a talk show host and audience makes you forgive him any pretensions. Here was a talented big man, a soft-spoken rogue, a terrific live performer. Lynott and Lizzy never again enjoyed the commercial success of 'Boys Are Back?' but what this collection proves is that he did put together a body of work which, in lyrical and melodic quality, surpassed his contemporaries.
Thin Lizzy called it a day in the early 1980s. Their old-school brand of lushly harmonic rock was the b?e-noir of the post-punk movement that had by then stormed the castle. 'Cruising In the Lizzy Mobile' was too symptomatic of the old-school seventies to be tolerated by the vulgar fury of Anarchy In the UK and all those who followed. Lynott made room for the new breed without any rancour. He supported the punk movement but couldn't hold pace, preferring to record solo records that delved into the deep pits of class and race.
What followed is the sadly-documented history and expectations of what might have been: Lynott died from drug abuse in 1986 at the age of 35. Sadly, one the best songs recorded before his death, and included here, was 'King's Call'. Premonition perhaps but happily, Ireland's first rock royal has solidified a fan base and an admiration that will endure. Covers of Lizzy songs by today's rock hierarchy have helped preserve and refresh Lizzy's material for the influential rock & roll it is. This lavishly produced and packaged collection leaves no excuses to those wondering why many believe Thin Lizzy deserve more attention.
Ever beloved among the rock and heavy metal communities, with a passionately devoted motley of defenders (check out the plethora of Lizzy tribute bands and websites), Lizzy was formed in the late '60s by the Crumlin Cowboy, singer/songwriter/bassist Phil Lynott. Lynott stuck out in his home town, being one of the very few working class black youths about the pebble-dashed terraces of Crumlin, Dublin. Lynott it would appear graduated from the same school for lyricists as Bruce Springsteen, producing odes to romanticized working-class heroes. Cars, girls, cowboys and highways would feature large in early Lynott lyrics but, like Springsteen, he'd later dig into a social conscience and an acute consciousness of race.
Lynott was the charismatic, tall and good looking front to the Lizzy machine but the band's success was guaranteed by some great players. Never an instrumental genius himself, Lynott's soulful vocals were oiled by the the ferocious, twin-lead guitar attack by guitarists Brian Robertson and Scott Gorham. The songs on this collection feature the various figures who one time or another partnered Gorham after Robertson left: Gary Moore is the best known of these and one can see why when he plays and sings alongside Lynott on the slow-burning ballad 'Still In Love With You'. Brian Downey, meanwhile was the powerful and stylish drummer driving the Lizzy engine. It was a tight machine, well oiled and working well by the time 'The Boys Are Back In Town' saw the day, with the smell of an absolute monster off it.
Lynott turned out songs at a prodigious rate so that after the 1975 release of 'Fighting' the band was producing an album almost every year. 'Boys Are Back...' came off the Jailbreak album, an album which in particular drops clues as to the Lizzy formula for success. With power chords and that populist Springsteenesque blue collar credibility, the sensibilities of the songs are just right to create the made-for-radio tunes which would guarantee the Lizzy crew decades of new fans alongside healthy industry and press attention.
Lynott, the black man, was an anomaly in the Waspish world of hard rock. Much of his work was thus fed by a sense of alienation, a feeling felt by an idol of his, Jimmy Hendrix. Lynott suffused his songs with images of the lone ranger, the romantic guy coming from the other side of the tracks, the jailbreaker, the downtrodden underdog. A genuinely artistic nature and a huge capacity to observe were what fed his flighty lyrical impulses and wishes for literary significance that didn't often work out. But watching Lynott open a show or charm a talk show host and audience makes you forgive him any pretensions. Here was a talented big man, a soft-spoken rogue, a terrific live performer. Lynott and Lizzy never again enjoyed the commercial success of 'Boys Are Back?' but what this collection proves is that he did put together a body of work which, in lyrical and melodic quality, surpassed his contemporaries.
Thin Lizzy called it a day in the early 1980s. Their old-school brand of lushly harmonic rock was the b?e-noir of the post-punk movement that had by then stormed the castle. 'Cruising In the Lizzy Mobile' was too symptomatic of the old-school seventies to be tolerated by the vulgar fury of Anarchy In the UK and all those who followed. Lynott made room for the new breed without any rancour. He supported the punk movement but couldn't hold pace, preferring to record solo records that delved into the deep pits of class and race.
What followed is the sadly-documented history and expectations of what might have been: Lynott died from drug abuse in 1986 at the age of 35. Sadly, one the best songs recorded before his death, and included here, was 'King's Call'. Premonition perhaps but happily, Ireland's first rock royal has solidified a fan base and an admiration that will endure. Covers of Lizzy songs by today's rock hierarchy have helped preserve and refresh Lizzy's material for the influential rock & roll it is. This lavishly produced and packaged collection leaves no excuses to those wondering why many believe Thin Lizzy deserve more attention.
TRACKLIST:
Vagabonds
1-1 –Thin Lizzy - The Farmer 3:37
1-2 –Thin Lizzy - The Friendly Ranger At Clontarf Castle 3:01
1-3 –Thin Lizzy - Remembering Part 1 5:58
1-4 –Thin Lizzy - Dublin 2:25
1-5 –Thin Lizzy - Remembering Part 2 (New Day) 5:03
1-6 –Thin Lizzy - Things Ain't Working Out Down At The Farm 4:28
1-7 –Thin Lizzy - Buffalo Gal 5:29
1-8 –Thin Lizzy - Sarah - Version 1 2:58
1-9 –Thin Lizzy - Brought Down 4:19
1-10 –Thin Lizzy - Whiskey In The Jar 5:44
1-11 –Thin Lizzy - Black Boys On The Corner 3:22
1-12 –Thin Lizzy - Randolph's Tango 3:47
1-13 –Thin Lizzy - Broken Dreams 4:25
1-14 –Thin Lizzy - Vagabond Of The Western World 4:43
1-15 –Thin Lizzy - Little Girl In Bloom 5:12
1-16 –Thin Lizzy - Slow Blues 5:12
1-17 –Thin Lizzy - The Rocker 2:40
1-18 –Thin Lizzy - Here I Go Again 3:51
Kings
2-1 –Thin Lizzy - Cruising In The Lizzymobile 4:59
2-2 –Thin Lizzy - Little Darling 2:54
2-3 –Thin Lizzy - Sitamoia 3:20
2-4 –Thin Lizzy - Philomena 3:41
2-5 –Thin Lizzy - Still In Love With You 5:38
2-6 –Thin Lizzy - Showdown 4:31
2-7 –Thin Lizzy - It's Only Money 2:47
2-8 –Thin Lizzy - Rosalie (Single Mix) 4:05
2-9 –Thin Lizzy - Half Caste 3:37
2-10 –Thin Lizzy - King's Vengeance 4:09
2-11 –Thin Lizzy - Suicide 5:12
2-12 –Thin Lizzy - Wild One 4:17
2-13 –Thin Lizzy - Try A Little Harder 4:01
2-14 –Thin Lizzy - Fighting My Way Back 3:11
2-15 –Thin Lizzy - Jailbreak 4:01
2-16 –Thin Lizzy - Romeo And The Lonely Girl 3:55
2-17 –Thin Lizzy - The Boys Are Back In Town 4:26
2-18 –Thin Lizzy - Cowboy Song 5:16
2-19 –Thin Lizzy - Emerald 4:03
Warriors
3-1 –Thin Lizzy - Johnny 4:24
3-2 –Thin Lizzy - Don't Beleive A Word 2:16
3-3 –Thin Lizzy - Fools Gold 3:51
3-4 –Thin Lizzy - Johnny The Fox Meets Jimmy The Weed 2:59
3-5 –Thin Lizzy - Massacre 2:59
3-6 –Thin Lizzy - Soldier Of Fortune 5:17
3-7 –Thin Lizzy - Bad Reputation 3:08
3-8 –Thin Lizzy - Dancing In The Moonlight (It's Caught Me In Its Spotlight) (Live) 3:26
3-9 –Thin Lizzy - Killer Without A Cause 3:31
3-10 –Thin Lizzy - Warrior 4:08
3-11 –Thin Lizzy - Are You Ready 2:42
3-12 –Thin Lizzy - Rosalie / Cowgirl's Song (Live) 4:03
3-13 –Thin Lizzy - Me And The Boys 3:33
3-14 –Gary Moore Featuring Phil Lynott - Parisienne Walkways 3:18
3-15 –Thin Lizzy - Do Anything You Want To 3:51
3-16 –Thin Lizzy - Waiting For An Alibi 3:29
3-17 –Thin Lizzy - Sarah 3:23
3-18 –Thin Lizzy - Got To Give It Up 4:22
3-19 –Thin Lizzy - Roisin Dubh (Black Rose): A Rock Legend 7:04
3-20 –Thin Lizzy - Just The Two Of Us 2:45
Angels
4-1 –Phil Lynott - Dear Miss Lonely Hearts 4:09
4-2 –Phil Lynott - King's Call 3:38
4-3 –Thin Lizzy - Chinatown 4:41
4-4 –Thin Lizzy - Sugar Blues 5:37
4-5 –Thin Lizzy - Killer On The Loose 3:53
4-6 –Thin Lizzy - Don't Play Around 3:07
4-7 –Thin Lizzy - Song For Jimi 4:49
4-8 –Thin Lizzy - Renegade 6:08
4-9 –Thin Lizzy - Hollywood (Down On Your Luck) 4:09
4-10 –Phil Lynott - Old Town 3:24
4-11 –Thin Lizzy - Thunder And Lightning 4:54
4-12 –Thin Lizzy - Cold Sweat 3:06
4-13 –Thin Lizzy - The Sun Goes Down 6:17
4-14 –Grand Slam - Sisters Of Mercy 6:20
4-15 –Phil Lynott - Nineteen 5:25
4-16 –Phil Lynott - A Night In The Life Of A Blues Singer 4:57
Personnel
Phil Lynott – bass guitar except disc 4: track 10, vocals
Brian Downey – drums, percussion except disc 3: track 17; disc 4: tracks 10 and 14–15
Eric Bell – guitar, backing vocals on disc 1; disc 2: track 1; disc 4: track 7
Scott Gorham – guitar, backing vocals on disc 2: tracks 4, 6–19; disc 3: tracks 1–13, 15–16, 18–20; disc 4: tracks 1–6, 8–9, 11–13, 16
Brian Robertson – guitar, backing vocals on disc 2: tracks 4, 6–19; disc 3: tracks 1–5, 9–13
Gary Moore – guitar, backing vocals on disc 2: tracks 2–3, 5; disc 3: tracks 14–20; disc 4: track 16
Snowy White – guitar, backing vocals on disc 4: tracks 1–6, 8–9
John Sykes – guitar, backing vocals on disc 4: tracks 11–13
Eric Wrixon – keyboards on disc 1: track 1
Darren Wharton – keyboards, backing vocals on disc 4: tracks 3–6, 8–13
Frankie Miller – joint lead vocals on disc 2: track 5
Roger Chapman – backing vocals on disc 2: track 8
John Helliwell – saxophone on disc 3: track 8
Huey Lewis – harmonica on disc 3: track 17
Mark Nauseef – drums on disc 3: track 17
Mark Knopfler – guitar on disc 4: track 2
Rusty Egan – drums on disc 4: track 10
Jimmy Bain – bass guitar and backing vocals on disc 4: track 10
Laurence Archer – guitar on disc 4: track 14
Doish Nagle – guitar on disc 4: track 14
Mark Stanway – keyboards on disc 4: track 14
Robbie Brennan – drums on disc 4: track 14
Paul Hardcastle – keyboards on disc 4: track 15
Robin George – guitar on disc 4: track 15
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