The Lilac Time - Paradise Circus (1989)
BAND/ARTIST: The Lilac Time
- Title: Paradise Circus
- Year Of Release: 1989/2006
- Label: UMC (Universal Music Catalogue)
- Genre: Indie Folk, Singer-Songwriter
- Quality: mp3 320 kbps / flac lossless (tracks)
- Total Time: 01:19:24
- Total Size: 188 / 488 mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist
01. American Eyes
02. The Lost Girl In The Midnight Sun
03. The Beauty In Your Body
04. If The Stars Shine Tonight
05. The Days Of The Week
06. She Still Loves You
07. Paradise Circus
08. The Girl Who Waves At Trains
09. The Last To Know
10. Father Mother Wife And Child
11. The Rollercoaster Song
12. Work For The Weekend
13. Twilight Beer Hall
14. The World In Her Arms
15. The Queen Of Heartless
16. Ponderosa Pine (Previously unreleased track)
17. Night Mail Dirty Amour
18. Shepherd's Plaid
19. Ounce Of Nails
20. Spin A Cavalu
21. Australian Worm (Previously unreleased track)
22. On Milk Wood Road (Previously unreleased track)
23. Night Soil
24. Rubovia
25. Silver Dagger (Previously unreleased track)
26. November (Previously unreleased track)
27. Paradise Circus (Previous Unreleased Version)
With bolder instrumentation, a brighter overall atmosphere, and a perfect glistening pop polish, Paradise Circus expands on the glorious promise of the Lilac Time's debut. Stephen Duffy might have later decried that the album was a more commercial affair than he would have liked, but its stunning melodies and sweet acoustic nature make for addictive listening. Duffy claims that studio execs forced the band back into the studio to cut singles and to Americanize their songs. Of course, such corporate tinkering stifles the creative process, but the insistence on catchy choruses does wonders for the band. Duffy and company seem to have looked to their peers for inspiration. Perhaps more here than on any other Lilac Time album, the band's influences are readily apparent. Channeling the Smiths, Nick Drake, and the Byrds, they package the mix into their own radio-friendly folk-pop style and create perhaps their most accessible album. Other than two brief instrumentals and the somber "She Still Loves You" and "Father Mother Wife and Child," the songs of Paradise Circus are happy etchings that immediately embed themselves in the catchy-tune section of a listener's brain. "The Beauty in Your Body" is musically about as close to Nick Drake as a song can be, though its melodramatic premise adds a chamber pop element. Throughout the album, Duffy's lyrics are as poetic and bittersweet as ever, but he delivers them with a bouncy step. Occasionally, horns and background vocals feel overly forced, for which one can blame the execs, but the album absolutely overflows with Johnny Marr-like jangling acoustic guitars and bluesy harmonica, pristine mandolins, and mesmerizing tempos that mingle to perfection with Duffy's elliptical, wry vocals. Ardent fans know that Duffy frequently crafts songs that suggest chugging trains, and Paradise Circus contains a plethora of selections that fit this bill: "The Lost Girl in the Midnight Sun," "The Days of the Week," "The Girl Who Waves at Trains," and "The Rollercoaster Song." Though its fine singles may not have become the hits they deserved to become, Paradise Circus as a whole is even stronger than its shiny, catchy highlights. As they would do throughout their career, the Lilac Time prove here that a great singles band can be simultaneously heady and masterful at crafting marvelous albums.
01. American Eyes
02. The Lost Girl In The Midnight Sun
03. The Beauty In Your Body
04. If The Stars Shine Tonight
05. The Days Of The Week
06. She Still Loves You
07. Paradise Circus
08. The Girl Who Waves At Trains
09. The Last To Know
10. Father Mother Wife And Child
11. The Rollercoaster Song
12. Work For The Weekend
13. Twilight Beer Hall
14. The World In Her Arms
15. The Queen Of Heartless
16. Ponderosa Pine (Previously unreleased track)
17. Night Mail Dirty Amour
18. Shepherd's Plaid
19. Ounce Of Nails
20. Spin A Cavalu
21. Australian Worm (Previously unreleased track)
22. On Milk Wood Road (Previously unreleased track)
23. Night Soil
24. Rubovia
25. Silver Dagger (Previously unreleased track)
26. November (Previously unreleased track)
27. Paradise Circus (Previous Unreleased Version)
With bolder instrumentation, a brighter overall atmosphere, and a perfect glistening pop polish, Paradise Circus expands on the glorious promise of the Lilac Time's debut. Stephen Duffy might have later decried that the album was a more commercial affair than he would have liked, but its stunning melodies and sweet acoustic nature make for addictive listening. Duffy claims that studio execs forced the band back into the studio to cut singles and to Americanize their songs. Of course, such corporate tinkering stifles the creative process, but the insistence on catchy choruses does wonders for the band. Duffy and company seem to have looked to their peers for inspiration. Perhaps more here than on any other Lilac Time album, the band's influences are readily apparent. Channeling the Smiths, Nick Drake, and the Byrds, they package the mix into their own radio-friendly folk-pop style and create perhaps their most accessible album. Other than two brief instrumentals and the somber "She Still Loves You" and "Father Mother Wife and Child," the songs of Paradise Circus are happy etchings that immediately embed themselves in the catchy-tune section of a listener's brain. "The Beauty in Your Body" is musically about as close to Nick Drake as a song can be, though its melodramatic premise adds a chamber pop element. Throughout the album, Duffy's lyrics are as poetic and bittersweet as ever, but he delivers them with a bouncy step. Occasionally, horns and background vocals feel overly forced, for which one can blame the execs, but the album absolutely overflows with Johnny Marr-like jangling acoustic guitars and bluesy harmonica, pristine mandolins, and mesmerizing tempos that mingle to perfection with Duffy's elliptical, wry vocals. Ardent fans know that Duffy frequently crafts songs that suggest chugging trains, and Paradise Circus contains a plethora of selections that fit this bill: "The Lost Girl in the Midnight Sun," "The Days of the Week," "The Girl Who Waves at Trains," and "The Rollercoaster Song." Though its fine singles may not have become the hits they deserved to become, Paradise Circus as a whole is even stronger than its shiny, catchy highlights. As they would do throughout their career, the Lilac Time prove here that a great singles band can be simultaneously heady and masterful at crafting marvelous albums.
Folk | Rock | Indie | FLAC / APE | Mp3
As a ISRA.CLOUD's PREMIUM member you will have the following benefits:
- Unlimited high speed downloads
- Download directly without waiting time
- Unlimited parallel downloads
- Support for download accelerators
- No advertising
- Resume broken downloads