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Audio CD review:
Please note that the below review is the views of the authors, and authors only. You can get a complete list of all Waterboys reviews here, or go back to the Waterboys tabs.
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| Waterboys - Fisherman's Blues, Part 2 |
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Band: Waterboys Title: Fisherman's Blues, Part 2 Rating: Release Date: 2002-07-09 Media: Audio CD Tracks: 1: On My Way To Heaven 2: Higher In Time 3: The Ladder 4: Too Close To Heaven 5: Good Man Gone 6: Blues For Your Baby 7: Custer's Blues 8: A Home In The Meadow 9: Tenderfootin' 10: Lonesome Old Wind 11: Higher In Time (2 pianos version) 12: Ain't Leavin', I'm Gone 13: Lonesome And A Long Way From Home 14: The Good Ship Sirius 15: Too Close To Heaven (live) |
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Not exactly Fisherman's Blues part 2 If you haven't bought that yet go immediately to that page and pick it up. My favorite Waterboys album is Fisherman's Blues. I was a Waterboys fan since I bought This Is The Sea in 1986. So much so that I bought their first album and Pagan Place (also really good). Fisherman's Blues was a revelation though. One of "those" timeless records that seem to get better with each listen. It was a real departure for Mike Scott and company and his last truly great album. It was with great anticipation then that I bought Fisherman's Blues Part Two. Having read up on it I was aware that it was exactly the same as the 2002 album Too Close To Heaven but with a 5-track bonus disc. It would have been interesting to hear this record when it was recorded. In style it sounds more like This Is The Sea than Fisherman's Blues. The main difference may be the instrumentation. Anthony Thistlethwaite's saxophone is all over this record and frankly it makes it sound dated. It may not have in the 80s but it does today. That's why it's really gratifying to hear the live version of the song "Too Close To Heaven" on the bonus disc without the saxophone. The track is undeniably strong and the centerpiece to the album. It's just so much better in the live version. As for the rest of the album there are moments of greatness and he definitley covers many styles ("On My Way To Heaven" is his gospel track for instance). You really can't tell from this record, however, that he's about to achieve SUCH greatness in the coming months that produced Fisherman's Blues. If you have the other records I've mentioned then pick this up. I'm glad it found its way from the vaults. Much like Prefab Sprout's lost album Protest Songs (recorded between 1985's absolute masterpiece Two Wheels Good/Steve McQueen and 1988's less interesting From Langley Park To Memphis) this record probably should have come out at the time but we're glad to have it anytime.
Way to Go Mike! Also see the remasters of the first two Waterboys disks and the latest new material "Rock in a Weary Land".
Nonetheless it is a great record. The songs are terrific, played with fire and commitment. This is definitely a band in a period of transition, but not quite ready to cut their moorings. That was still to come. Scott suggests there are hundreds of hours of music still to be distilled, and so perhaps that ragile threshold will be revealed, the faery door uncovered. For the meantime, both in the live sets and the studio work, this is a great addition to the Waterboys cannon. I'd heartily recommend it, but don't expect what would turn out to be one of the great folk/roots albums ever. It is a coda to what was a brilliantly inspired rock band.
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