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Cheap Pearls & Whisky Dreams: The Best Of
Released: | 1999 |
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Formats: | CD |
Studio/Live?: | Studio |
1 | Halleluiah Man |
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2 | Winter |
3 | River Of People |
4 | Who In Their Right Mind |
5 | Walk The Last Mile |
6 | The Last Ship On The River |
7 | My Love Lives In A Dead House |
8 | Strange Kind Of Love |
9 | Looking For Angeline |
10 | Jocelyn Square |
11 | You Are Beautiful |
12 | Up Escalator |
13 | Wanderlust 2 |
14 | Sometimes I Want To Give Up |
15 | Pray For Love |
16 | Candybar Express |
17 | Whisky Dream |
User Reviews:
Glasgow stalwarts compiled. Not titled Greatest Hits because they didn't have any.
In 1986, Love & Money were Scotland's latest rock hopes, their single "Candybar Express" swaggering enough to land them support on a U2 tour. But singer James Grant subsequently found jazz, subtlety, and artful contemplation, and they instead became a cult act whose heart-on-sleeve approach to music often went against mainstream tastes. A shame, for Grant was blessed with the lyricism of a poet. "Walk The Last Mile" and "Winter" made heartache appealling, while "Up Escalator" and "Hallulujah Man" (sic) possessed the gusto required for daytime radio play, which they never recieved. Now defunct, Love & Money only ever reached a tiny audience which, if nothing else, should make them revered further still by the few that already do."
Love And Money, Cheap Pearls and Whisky Dreams
Ten painful years of the misunderstood and frequently misplaced Scottish band are commemorated here, revealing the multiple personalities that made them so hard to market in the first place. From the raucous bombast of 'Candybar Express' to the slick funk rock of 'Jocelyn Square', songwriter James Grant was a hard man to pin down. Compiled from their four Polygram releases, Cheap Pearls... makes it apparent that he was far more at ease with the introspective country-tinged material of their last (and least commercially successful) album, Dogs In The Traffic. Overall, it's a fitting epitaph for a band who touched greatness.