Marianne Faithfull - Easy Come Easy Go - 2CD (2008)
BAND/ARTIST: Marianne Faithfull
- Title: Easy Come Easy Go - 2CD
- Year Of Release: 2008
- Label: Dramatico / Naive
- Genre: Pop, Rock, Folk
- Quality: FLAC (tracks) | Mp3 / 320kbps
- Total Time: 01:25:17
- Total Size: 504 MB | 194 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist
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CD1
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01. Down From Dover
02. Hold on, Hold On (feat. Cat Power)
03. Solitude
04. The Crane Wife 3 (feat. Nick Cave)
05. Easy Come, Easy Go
06. Children of Stone (feat. Rufus Wainwright)
07. How Many Worlds? (feat. Teddy Thompson)
08. In Germany Before the War
09. O O Baby (feat. Antony)
10. Sing Me Back Home (feat. Keith Richards)
CD2
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01. Salvation (feat. Sean Lennon)
02. Black Coffee
03. The Phoenix
04. Dear God Please Help Me
05. Kimbie
06. Many a Mile to Freedom
07. Somewhere (feat. Jarvis Cocker)
08. Flandyke Shore (feat. Kate & Anna McGarrigle)
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CD1
----
01. Down From Dover
02. Hold on, Hold On (feat. Cat Power)
03. Solitude
04. The Crane Wife 3 (feat. Nick Cave)
05. Easy Come, Easy Go
06. Children of Stone (feat. Rufus Wainwright)
07. How Many Worlds? (feat. Teddy Thompson)
08. In Germany Before the War
09. O O Baby (feat. Antony)
10. Sing Me Back Home (feat. Keith Richards)
CD2
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01. Salvation (feat. Sean Lennon)
02. Black Coffee
03. The Phoenix
04. Dear God Please Help Me
05. Kimbie
06. Many a Mile to Freedom
07. Somewhere (feat. Jarvis Cocker)
08. Flandyke Shore (feat. Kate & Anna McGarrigle)
Songstress Marianne Faithfull last collaborated with producer Hal Willner on her iconic Strange Weather album in 1987. Though Faithfull has continued to record sporadically -- and has written and published her memoirs -- it's odd to think that she hasn't worked with Willner again until now, because then as now, the match feels effortless and natural. Like Strange Weather, Easy Come Easy Go is a covers collection, featuring Faithfull in different musical settings and interpreting the songs of everyone from Merle Haggard to Smokey Robinson to Duke Ellington to Randy Newman to the Decemberists to Morrissey with a killer guest list including Antony Hegarty, Rufus Wainwright, Teddy Thompson, Kate & Anna McGarrigle, Jarvis Cocker, Jenni Muldaur, Sean Lennon, Warren Ellis, Nick Cave, and Keith Richards. The core band on this set includes old friends like Marc Ribot and Greg Cohen as well as drummer Jim White, Rob Burger, Doug Weiselman, Steve Weisberg, Barry Reynolds, Steven Bernstein, Marty Ehrlich, and Lenny Pickett. The sense of stylistic sprawl on these 12 songs is incredible. The album opener, a cover of Dolly Parton's "Down from Dover," features the full band and guests numbering 18 strong! Faithfull's trademark deep-throated, whiskey-and-cigarettes-ravaged voice is in better shape than it's been in a decade at least. It's full and expressive, and she brings up a depth of passion for this sad tale that almost soars. The band, arranged by Weisberg, plays with beautiful space and elegant harmonics with nice work by Ribot and Burger.
Cave sings backing vocals on the Decemberists' "The Crane Wife 3," its lithe rock arrangement shaded by a beautiful British folk-style melody and gorgeous bass work by Cohen, celeste by Burger, and a three-piece string section. While Wainwright's signature backing vocals grace a jazzy arrangement of Espers' "Children of Stone," and the chart is eight minutes of pure, nocturnal lounge lizard eros, it does go on a bit too long, emptying it somewhat of its power. Ellington's "Solitude" works far better, as Faithfull's command of sparse phrases drives the tune, expressing more in the spaces between words than the words themselves -- or even her voice. Other highlights include an excellent version of Judee Sill's "The Phoenix," and a deeply emotive, almost startling cover of Morrissey's "Dear God Please Help Me. There is a fantastic--if surreal--faux-soul reading of Robinson's "Ooh Baby Baby," as a duet with AntonyThe disc closes with Richards adding both his guitar (to those of Ribot and Reynolds) and his raggedy croak of a vocal to Faithfull's on Haggard's "Sing Me Back Home." It's sad and slow, but feels more contrived than honestly emotional. While this is a long journey with a couple of missteps Ms. Faithfull shows up in excellent form throughout this offering. If you are patient, there is more than enough here to hold your attention and take you on journeys through love, lust, tragedy, and longing and bring you home again.(The British version of this CD, contains an extra CD with six extra tracks--the Morrissey and Judee SIll covers on this version came from the British one--and a bonus DVD with a documentary about the making of the album.)~Review by Thom Jurek
Cave sings backing vocals on the Decemberists' "The Crane Wife 3," its lithe rock arrangement shaded by a beautiful British folk-style melody and gorgeous bass work by Cohen, celeste by Burger, and a three-piece string section. While Wainwright's signature backing vocals grace a jazzy arrangement of Espers' "Children of Stone," and the chart is eight minutes of pure, nocturnal lounge lizard eros, it does go on a bit too long, emptying it somewhat of its power. Ellington's "Solitude" works far better, as Faithfull's command of sparse phrases drives the tune, expressing more in the spaces between words than the words themselves -- or even her voice. Other highlights include an excellent version of Judee Sill's "The Phoenix," and a deeply emotive, almost startling cover of Morrissey's "Dear God Please Help Me. There is a fantastic--if surreal--faux-soul reading of Robinson's "Ooh Baby Baby," as a duet with AntonyThe disc closes with Richards adding both his guitar (to those of Ribot and Reynolds) and his raggedy croak of a vocal to Faithfull's on Haggard's "Sing Me Back Home." It's sad and slow, but feels more contrived than honestly emotional. While this is a long journey with a couple of missteps Ms. Faithfull shows up in excellent form throughout this offering. If you are patient, there is more than enough here to hold your attention and take you on journeys through love, lust, tragedy, and longing and bring you home again.(The British version of this CD, contains an extra CD with six extra tracks--the Morrissey and Judee SIll covers on this version came from the British one--and a bonus DVD with a documentary about the making of the album.)~Review by Thom Jurek
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