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Lines (Unthanks album)

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Lines
Studio album by
Released22 February 2019 (UK); pre-released on band's website on 22 November 2018
GenreFolk
LabelRabble Rouser Music
ProducerAdrian McNally
The Unthanks chronology
The Songs and Poems of Molly Drake
(2017)
Lines
(2019)
Live And Unaccompanied
(2020)

Lines (Parts One, Two & Three), a trilogy of albums with a poetic theme by English folk group the Unthanks, was pre-released on the band's website in November 2018, on 10" vinyl, CD and download, prior to their official release on 22 February 2019. They were made available as three separate albums and also packaged together in a slipcase.

Lines Part One: Lillian Bilocca is about the 1968 trawler disaster in Kingston upon Hull in which 58 men died. The songs were written by actor and writer Maxine Peake, with music by Adrian McNally. They were originally performed live by the Unthanks in The Last Testament of Lillian Bilocca, a theatrical event written by Peake.

Lines Part Two: World War One is about the First World War. Its songs were originally conceived for a live audio-visual project in 2014, A Time and a Place. One of the songs, "Roland and Vera", is adapted from letters between the writer Vera Brittain who was a Voluntary Aid Detachment nurse in the war, and her fiancé Roland Leighton, a poet, who died from a gunshot wound sustained on the war front.[1]

Lines Part Three: Emily Brontë consists of ten poems by Emily Brontë, set to music by Adrian McNally. The songs were commissioned by the Brontë Society to mark the 200th anniversary of her birth.[1]

Reception

The album received a four-starred review in The Guardian from Neil Spencer.[2] Also writing in The Guardian, Jude Rogers said that "The Unthanks continue to experiment ravenously and joyously".[3]

Track listing

Part One: Lillian Bilocca

  • "Lillian (Prelude)" (Adrian McNally)
  • "A Whistling Woman" (words: Maxine Peake / music: Adrian McNally and Becky Unthank)
  • "The Sea is a Woman" (words: Maxine Peake / music: Adrian McNally)
  • "Lonesome Cowboy" (Claude Bolling/ Jack Fishman)
  • "Lillian II (The Banqueting Hall Scene)" (Adrian McNally)

Part Two: World War One

Part Three: Emily Brontë

  • "The Parsonage" (words: Emily Brontë / music: Adrian McNally, arranged by Adrian McNally, Rachel Unthank and Becky Unthank)
  • "Shall Earth No More Inspire Thee" (words: Emily Brontë / music: Adrian McNally, arranged by Adrian McNally, Rachel Unthank and Becky Unthank)
  • "High Waving Heather" (words: Emily Brontë / music: Adrian McNally, arranged by Adrian McNally, Rachel Unthank and Becky Unthank)
  • "She Dried Her Tears and They Did Smile" (words: Emily Brontë / music: Adrian McNally, arranged by Adrian McNally, Rachel Unthank and Becky Unthank)
  • "The Night is Darkening Round Me" (words: Emily Brontë / music: Adrian McNally, arranged by Adrian McNally, Rachel Unthank and Becky Unthank)
  • "Deep Deep Down in the Silent Grave" (words: Emily Brontë / music: Adrian McNally, arranged by Adrian McNally, Rachel Unthank and Becky Unthank)
  • "Lines" (words: Emily Brontë / music: Adrian McNally, arranged by Adrian McNally, Rachel Unthank and Becky Unthank)
  • "Remembrance" (words: Emily Brontë / music: Rachel Unthank / Adrian McNally, arranged by Adrian McNally, Rachel Unthank, Becky Unthank, based on a traditional tune)
  • "O Evening Why" (words: Emily Brontë / music: Adrian McNally, arranged by Adrian McNally, Rachel Unthank and Becky Unthank)
  • "I'm Happiest When Most Away" (words: Emily Brontë / music: Adrian McNally, arranged by Adrian McNally, Rachel Unthank and Becky Unthank)

Production

The albums' cover artwork is by Natalie Rae Reid.

References

  1. ^ a b Gallacher, Alex (21 November 2018). "The Unthanks: Unaccompanied, As We Are tour + new album 'Lines' and more". Folk Radio UK. Retrieved 22 November 2018.
  2. ^ Neil Spencer (17 February 2019). "The Unthanks: Lines review – national treasures sing Emily Brontë and Maxine Peake". The Guardian. Retrieved 6 July 2019.
  3. ^ Rogers, Jude (8 February 2019). "Also out this month". The Guardian. Retrieved 16 April 2019.

Further reading