Downunder: Live in Australia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Downunder: Live In Australia)
| Downunder: Live In Australia | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
||||
| Live album by Bert Jansch | ||||
| Released | 22 January 2001 | |||
| Recorded | March 1998, over two nights at the Continental Café, Melbourne, Australia | |||
| Genre | Folk | |||
| Label | Castle Music | |||
| Producer | Mixed at home by Bert Jansch | |||
| Bert Jansch chronology | ||||
|
||||
| Professional ratings | |
|---|---|
| Review scores | |
| Source | Rating |
| Allmusic | |
Downunder: Live In Australia is a live album by Scottish folk the late musician Bert Jansch, released in January 2001. The concert was recorded over two nights at the Continental Café in Melbourne, Australia.
Bearing only a slight overlap with Jansch's previous live album Live At The 12 Bar in content, this was recorded on multi-track rather than straight-to-DAT, with consequently smoother sound and the rare bonus of accompanying musicians. The percussionist was added on after the gig recordings at a studio in Australia, and Jansch mixed the tracks in London.[2]
[edit] Track listing
All tracks composed by Bert Jansch; except where indicated
- "Blues Run the Game" (Frank) - 3:08
- "Come Back Baby" (Davis) - 3:34
- "The Lily of the West" (traditional) - 4:14
- "Paper Houses" - 3:09
- "Toy Balloon" - 3:59
- "My Donald" (Hand) - 2:57
- "Born and Bred in Old Ireland" - 3:04
- "She Moved Through the Fair" (traditional) - 5:22
- "Carnival" (Frank) - 4:31
- "Little Max" - 3:25
- "Strolling Down the Highway" - 3:19
- "Angie" (Adderley, Graham) - 3:50
- "Curragh of Kildare" (traditional) - 4:20
- "Downunder" - 4:59
- "How It All Came Down" - 4:13
[edit] Personnel
- Bert Jansch - guitar, vocals
- Peter Howell - bass (not the Doctor Who Peter Howell - This is the Australian one!)
- Ian Clarke - percussion (not the Uriah Heep Ian Clarke - This is the Australian one!)
[edit] References
- ^ Allmusic review
- ^ "Bert Jansch website". http://www.bertjansch.com/disco.html. Retrieved 26 November 2008.
| This 2000s folk album-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
|
|||||||||||
