Play Each Morning Wild Queen

Play Each Morning Wild Queen

Play Each Morning Wild Queen

Track Listings
 
1. Driving With Noel
2. Threnody
3. Lily of the West
4. Buckingham Palace
5. A Meaningful Dialogue
6. Race tot he Moon
7. The Wine with the Stars in It / Mr' and Mrs. O'Mara
8. All Purpose Folk Song (Child Ballad #1)
9. Sure of Me
10. Ride On / Reverend Guiness
11. Personal Thing
12. Nottingham Ale

Editorial Reviews
Rambles.net
"Diversity is the watchword when dealing with these formidable ladies...Cunning musicianship sets traditional roots on end..."

Product Description
The Flash Girls' highly anticipated third album is here. Songs by Neil Gaiman, Dorothy Parker, and others; Robin Anders, Armitage Shanks, and more in guest appearances; volcanoes, rainstorms, ghosts, and relationships among the many subjects covered.

Play Each Morning Wild Queen

Play Each Morning Wild Queen,The Flash Girls
Play Each Morning Wild Queen
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • Virtuosity
  • Warning: Severe danger of swooning
  • Musical bliss
Play Each Morning Wild Queen

ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Folk | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Folk | Indie Music | Stores | Music
ASIN: B00005QDW6
Release Date: 2001-09-30

Tracks:

  1. Driving With Noel
  2. Threnody
  3. Lily of the West
  4. Buckingham Palace
  5. A Meaningful Dialogue
  6. Race tot he Moon
  7. The Wine with the Stars in It / Mr' and Mrs. O'Mara
  8. All Purpose Folk Song (Child Ballad #1)
  9. Sure of Me
  10. Ride On / Reverend Guiness
  11. Personal Thing
  12. Nottingham Ale

Album Description

The Flash Girls' highly anticipated third album is here. Songs by Neil Gaiman, Dorothy Parker, and others; Robin Anders, Armitage Shanks, and more in guest appearances; volcanoes, rainstorms, ghosts, and relationships among the many subjects covered.

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Virtuosity.......2004-01-20

Emma and Lorraine have been brilliant musicians for years, and their folk rock is some of the hottest, hippest, and cleverest ever done. It couldn't be anything else, what with the brilliance they bring to the music, combined with the elite writers creating some of the songs. Best-seller talent everywhere you look!

5 out of 5 stars Warning: Severe danger of swooning.......2002-05-26

It's very rare that I fall in love so hard and so fast. The Flash Girls have struck me senseless. There is something about them, something deeply odd and beautiful.

"Pah! Tish and fipsy!" you might cry. But I know that these two formidable ladies have a keen sense of humour and wit. I know that they love folk music and yet do not regard it as sacred. They are willing to play with it, to insult it, to adore it and to drag it to places that the tedious folk-puritan crowd would scorn and deride in their ignorance.

What is so wonderful about Emma Bull and Lorraine Garland?

Well, in an age of spit and polish until all humanity is scrubbed away, the Flash Girls' music is pleasingly rough and ready. You will detect the odd mistake, but such a sacrifice in production makes the music far more immediate and human. The duo's voices live the songs. As if they were the characters themselves, telling you their tales in some rather splendid tavern. Emma and Lorraine's voices complement each other very well, alternating and supporting each other in a wonderfully unselfish way. Their subject matter is also eclectic . Songs about cliché and drink, old folk standards and childishness. During a time where there appears to be only three subjects in mass-market music (lust, self-pity and sheep-like rebellion) this is highly refreshing.

Best songs? Well, The A. A Milne based 'Buckingham Palace' is a delight in its catchy jaggedness. 'A Meaningful Dialogue' is folk meet 50's surf pop, with fab results. Wickedly funny and silly, the song creates a virtue in childish behaviour. 'Race to the Moon' has a driving, hypnotic chorus. 'Nottingham Ale' thrives on drunken chorus and celebrates a vital subject that pop all too often ignores; drink and being drunk. 'All Purpose Folk Song' is a gloriously sharp satire of cliché driven folk music. Taking the form of a capella, it recites pretty much every standard of cliché stricken folk, whilst retaining an odd love for it at the same time.

"That's all very well," harumphs friend reader, "but it still doesn't explain why you are in love them."

Ah, well. There is something... magical about this album. The Flash Girls are like two literary characters whom I have fallen in love with. Like with Rose Walker of Neil Gaiman's 'Sandman', Fuchsia of the Gormenghast trilogy by Mervyn Peake or even Eddi of Emma Bull's own classic, 'War for the Oakes', I find myself in love. And I would kill for a poster of the duo. Though they would probably in top folk romantic style avenge my poor victim's death by sinking my ship with a large catapult or poisoning my vitals or something.

And then write a biting, kick-ass song about the incident, no doubt.

*Sigh*

"With a mandolin or an angry grin and a dead wife in the larder. And somewhere around this point in the song someone normally gets transformed into a loathely worm."

Pretty much every song on this album is top notch. You might not 'get it' on your first listen but persevere, it is well worth it. Several of the songs are penned by Neil Gaiman as well and jolly good they are as well. The band I currently want to see live most of all (though there is little chance, bah) and the biggest incentive for going to Minnesota I know of, being an ignorant Brit.

And there is a song with lyrics from the poetry of Dorothy Parker. Yeah, look impressed!

(Also check out the equally ace 'Maurice & I', their previous album for songs about Yeti, bean-sidhe and using sarcasm as a means to robbing gas stations)

5 out of 5 stars Musical bliss.......2001-10-01

If you're already a fan of the Flash Girls, this is their best album yet. If you're not, you will be after you listen to it. This folk-rock-eclectic CD ranges from the stark, compelling instrumental "Riding with Noel", to the timeless, stripped-down folk ballad "Lily of the West," to the catchy cheer of "Buckingham Palace" and "Nottingham Ale," to the laugh-aloud "A Meaningful Dialogue," to my favorite piece, the Neil Gaiman-penned "A Personal Thing," which is eerie and lyrical and edged with black humor, and packs quite an emotional punch.

Not one track is a throwaway, and almost all stand up to repeated listening. I know, it's been on constant rotation in my car since I got it. Don't miss this one.

Music Review:

  1. Requia & Other Compositions For Guitar Solo
  2. Scuffletown
  3. Serendipity: An Introduction to John Martyn [Original recording remastered] [Import]
  4. Sings Billie Holiday [Live]
  5. Sings Country & Irish [Import]
  6. Songs of Robert Burns, Vol. 5 & 6
  7. Sunrise/Street Singer [Import]
  8. Texas Bohemia: The Texas Bohemian Moravian German Bands [Import]
  9. The Big Time
  10. The Early Years (1957-1958)

Music Review

music review

Recommended Music:

Live Infinis [Live] [Import]

The Virtuoso Bassoon

The World is Only Air... and a Very Dangerous Hat

New York City, Birdland Club February 21, 1954 [Live]

You've Seen Us...You Must Have Seen Us

Struggle To Survive [Explicit Lyrics]

To Jesus, With Love

The World of Classic [Box set] [Import]

Too Good to Stop Now

Tangos De Los Angeles V.3 [Import]

What Are You Going To Do With Your Life? [Import]

Souvenir 1978 En Public [Import]

Velfarre V.13 [Import]

In a Summer Garden: The Music of Delius

On the Air 1937-1938