| 1. Ferry Cross the Mersey - Gerry & the Pacemakers |
| 2. Trains and Boats and Planes - Billy J. Kramer |
| 3. Tobacco Road - The Nashville Teens |
| 4. You've Never Been in Love Like This Before - Unit 4+2 |
| 5. Mama - Dave Berry |
| 6. Mirror Mirror - Pinkerton's Assorted Colours |
| 7. Pied Piper - Crispian St. Peters |
| 8. Baby, Now That I've Found You - The Foundations |
| 9. Silence Is Golden - The Tremeloes |
| 10. Night of Fear - Carl Wayne |
British Rock: On Tour,Various Artists,Direct Source Label,British Invasion,Folk-Rock,Pop,Rock,Rock & Roll,Rock/Pop Collections
Average customer rating:
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Gone to Australia: On Tour 1975-1984
Steeleye Span Manufacturer: Raven [Australia] ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00005NHND Release Date: 2001-10-01 |
Tracks:
- Black Jack Davey
- Sails Of Silver
- Let Her Go Down
- Alison Gross
- Barnet Fair
- Gone To America
- Longbone
- Bach Goes To Limerick
- All Around My Hat
- Gaudete
- Sligo Maid
- Cam Ye O'er Frae France
- Bachelor's Hall
- Blackleg Miner
- Spotted Cow/Sailor's Bonnet
- Thomas The Rhymer
- The Mason's Apron
- Sun Waves/The Devil's Dream
Album Description
Expanding on the rare & elusive 1983 Australian-only 'On Tour' LP, 'Gone To Australia' includes the remixed tracks from that album, plus previously unreleased live performances of such Steeleye favorites as 'Barnet Fair', 'Cam Ye O'er Frae France', 'Black Leg Miner', 'Thomas The Rhymer' & 'The Mason's Apron'. The set is rounded out by 'Sum Waves'/The Devil's Dream' from a 1975 live performance that was painstakingly restored from the ultra-rare & only surviving acetate of this recording. Includes deluxe 12 page color booklet featuring rare photos & detailed liner notes by band members Maddy Prior & Peter Knight.Album Details
Expanding on the Rare and Elusive 1983 Australian 'on Tour' LP, 'gone to Australia' Includes the Remixed Tracks from that Album plus Previously Unreleased Live Performances of Such Steeleye Favorites as 'barnet Fair', 'cam Ye O'er Frae France' and 't He Mason's Apron'. Issued with Full Blessings from the Band, the Package Comes Complete with a Deluxe, 12 Page Color Booklet featuring Rare Photos and Detailed Liner Notes by Band Members Maddy Prior and Peter Knight.Customer Reviews:
A Great Live Band.......2006-03-02
not the best song selection.......2003-08-11
Horslips, and the other bands mentioned, are not in the same genre as Steeleye Span, anyway, so what`s the point in comparing.
Gone To Australia is not a good introduction to Steeleye Span, in my opinion, as it contains too many tracks from the album Sails of Silver(1980), on which most of the tracks were self-penned and, admittedly, writing purely original material, as opposed to adaptations of traditional songs, was not their forte.
The sound quality is mostly good, though(unlike on a certain Horslips live album). There are good versions of some of the Seventies material.
Steeleye Span never purported to be heavy-rockers. I discovered Steeleye Span`s music only quite recently, after having been raised on rock music(incl. Horslips) since I was a kid, and I find the lack of long and showy guitar solos refreshing. The subtlety and restraint with which this band has always approached its music is to be admired, and guitarist Bob Johnson could make just as much noise as any of the folk-ROCKers if he had so chosen. But he didn`t so choose.
Time after time, year after year, Steeleye Span has somehow managed to take old, forgotten and obscure songs and adapt them in such a way that even though they are completely re-invented, the way in which it has been done is so subtle as to fool the unknowing into thinking that the Steeleye version is the same as the "original" version! That`s how good they are. But what the uninformed don`t realise is that so many of the songs that Steeleye recorded over the years had never been recorded before, even acoustically. So the Steeleye versions are the ONLY versions, in many instances. If it weren`t for bands like Steeleye Span and Fairport Convention, all of these wonderful songs would still be hidden away in dusty old manuscripts.
Anyway, the point is this, it is patently ludicrous to slate a band like Steeleye Span, who after all gave this wonderful musical heritage back to the people, just because they don`t sound like Horslips, a band who, to be fair, were pretty hit-and-miss, possibly more hit than miss. At least Steeleye Span always knew what they wanted to do, and they got on with it consistently over the years.
So, if you don`t appreciate Steeleye Span and would prefer to listen to Dearg Doom whilst playing air-guitar in front of a mirror(LOL), you have every right to do so. But don`t compare the two, please. Any band who would concoct, play, record, and release the likes of Short Stories-Tall Tales is not worthy of comparison with the sophisticated musicians that are Steeleye Span.
By the way,for anyone new to, but interested in Steeleye Span, the best albums are those from 1972-1978 inclusive. Also, Tonight`s the Night, and In Concert, are good live albums.
not the best song selection.......2003-08-11
Horslips, and the other bands mentioned, are not in the same genre as Steeleye Span, anyway, so what`s the point in comparing.
Gone To Australia is not a good introduction to Steeleye Span, in my opinion, as it contains too many tracks from the album Sails of Silver(1980), on which most of the tracks were self-penned and, admittedly, writing purely original material, as opposed to adaptations of traditional songs, was not their forte.
The sound quality is mostly good, though(unlike on a certain Horslips live album). There are good versions of some of the Seventies material.
Steeleye Span never purported to be heavy-rockers. I discovered Steeleye Span`s music only quite recently, after having been raised on rock music(incl. Horslips) since I was a kid, and I find the lack of long and showy guitar solos refreshing. The subtlety and restraint with with this band has always approached its music is to be admired, and guitarist Bob Johnson could make just as much noise as any of the folk-ROCKers if he had so chosen. But he didn`t so choose.
Time after time, year after year, Steeleye Span has somehow managed to take old, forgotten and obscure songs and adapt them in such a way that even though they are completely re-invented, the way in which it has been done is so subtle as to fool the unknowing into thinking that the Steeleye version is the original version! That`s how good they are. But what the uninformed don`t realise is that so many of the songs that Steeleye recorded over the years had never been recorded before, even acoustically. If it weren`t for bands like Steeleye Span and Fairport Convention, all of these wonderful songs would still be hidden away in dusty old manuscripts.
Anyway, the point is this, it is patently ludicrous to slate a band like Steeleye Span, who after all gave this wonderful musical heritage back to the people, just because they don`t sound like Horslips, a band who, to be fair, were pretty hit-and-miss, possibly more hit than miss. At least Steeleye Span always knew what they wanted to do, and they got on with it consistently over the years.
So, if you don`t appreciate Steeleye Span and would prefer to listen to Dearg Doom whilst playing air-guitar in front of a mirror(LOL), you have every right to do so. But don`t compare the two, please. Any band who would concoct, play, record, and release the likes of Short Stories-Tall Tales is not worthy of comparison with the sophisticated musicians that are Steeleye Span.
By the way,for anyone new to, but interested in Steleye Span, the best albums are those from 1972-1978 inclusive. Also, Tonight`s the Night, and In Concert, are good live albums.
As Exciting as a Ballerina With Lead Boots.......2003-08-01
down under.......2002-03-07
There ARE, however, good live versions of some of the earlier material on this CD; Black Jack Davey, Alison Gross, Bach Goes to Limerick, Blackleg Miner, and a couple more.
The ubiquitous All Around My Hat is included here, as well. No surprises there. There is only one live Span album that *doesn`t* have that song! Perhaps the record companies think that any live or compilation CD *without* the Hat song won`t sell??
I have so many versions of this song by now that it`s lost its appeal through sheer overkill, and I`m disinclined to listen to *any* of the versions, apart from maybe the original studio version.
Gaudete, the other "hit", is here again, too, although, it`s only on *two* other live Span CDs. So, not quite as common.
The obligatory Thomas the Rhymer was not left out, either. The version here is the weakest I`ve heard. It sounds like the drummer was in another building altogether.
To be fair, the main reason that I was so disappointed with this CD was the fact that, several months before its release, it had been (erroneously) hyped as being an exciting new collection of live recordings from the seventies of tracks that had never been available before, including tracks that the band had never included on any album, in any form, live or studio recorded. New(old) material, in other words. Too good to be true, I had thought, and I was right.
The thing is, genuinely rare archive material does exist but, because of record company restrictions, we`ll probably have to wait until the band are completely defunct(they`re split now but may get back together in the future)before any of the really interesting archive recordings are allowed to be published. Over the years Steeleye performed many other great songs at concerts that have never been available to listen to(apart from on old bootlegs), so, for now, we have to make do with yet more versions of the same old numbers....
Average customer rating: |
British Rock: On Tour
Various Artists Manufacturer: Direct Source Label ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00005ASNR Release Date: 2000-06-20 |
Tracks:
- Ferry Cross the Mersey - Gerry & the Pacemakers
- Trains and Boats and Planes - Billy J. Kramer
- Tobacco Road - The Nashville Teens
- You've Never Been in Love Like This Before - Unit 4+2
- Mama - Dave Berry
- Mirror Mirror - Pinkerton's Assorted Colours
- Pied Piper - Crispian St. Peters
- Baby, Now That I've Found You - The Foundations
- Silence Is Golden - The Tremeloes
- Night of Fear - Carl Wayne
Rock Music:
