Durga Rising
Appearance
Durga Rising | |
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Studio album by | |
Released | 1997 Re-released 2011 Keda Records with additional previously unreleased tracks |
Studio | Red Fort Studios, London, UK |
Genre | Bhangra, jazz, blues, rhythm and blues |
Length | 51:25 |
Label | Keda Records |
Producer | Kuljit Bhamra, Christoph Bracher, Russell Churney, Barb Jungr |
Durga Rising is a studio album by the artists Barb Jungr, Kuljit Bhamra and Russell Churney, containing 11 original songs by the trio and 4 covering versions, released in 1997.
Track listing
- "The Cutter" (Pete DeFreitas, Ian McCulloch, Les Pattinson, Will Sergeant) – 3:45
- Originally from the Echo and the Bunnymen single The Cutter/Way Out and Up We Go (1983) and the Echo and the Bunnymen album Porcupine (1983)
- "Still Moving" (Kuljit Bhamra, Barb Jungr) – 3:06
- "Choose to be Alone" (Russell Churney, Barb Jungr) – 3:41
- "Bombay Dreaming" (Barb Jungr, James Tomalin) – 3:52
- "Crimes Against Nature" (Barb Jungr, James Tomalin) – 4:02
- "Unchain My Heart" (Freddy James, Agnes Jones) – 3:12
- Originally from the Frances Faye album Caught in the Act: At the Thunderbird, Las Vegas (1958)
- "Spit It Out" (Barb Jungr, Michael Parker) – 5:40
- "Go Down Easy" (John Martyn) – 5:10
- Originally from the John Martyn album Solid Air (1973)
- "Tears in a Bottle" (Barb Jungr, Parker) – 3:19
- "Blind Willie McTell" (Bob Dylan) – 8:48
- Originally from the Bob Dylan album The Bootleg Series: Vols 1-3 (1991)
- "Train on the Move" (Barb Jungr, James Tomalin) – 6:47
Personnel
Musicians
- Barb Jungr - vocals, harmonica, mandolin
- Russell Churney - piano, keyboards
- Kuljit Bhamra - percussion
- James Tomalin - guitar, banjo
- Stan Adler - cello
Other personnel
- Christoph Bracher - engineer
- Mital Mehta - studio assistant
- Barb Jungr - design
- Dibble - design
- Garry Laybourn - photography
- Caren Grossman - administration
External links
- Barb Jungr
- Official website
- Russell Churney biography
- Russell Churney's Wikipedia entry
- Kuljit Bhamra biography
- Kuljit Bhamra section of the Keda Records website
- James Tomalin biography
- James Tomalin's Lime Music website