Skip to content Skip to sidebar Skip to footer

I Will Say It Again Pau

1998 studio anthology by T'Pau

Carmine
Red T'Pau.jpg
Studio album by

T'Pau

Released xiv September 1998
Recorded Dec 1997–July 1998
Genre
  • Pop
  • rock
Length twoscore:01
Label Gnatfish
T'Pau chronology
The Promise
(1991)
Red
(1998)
Pleasure & Pain
(2015)

Carmine is the fourth studio anthology by British pop/rock grouping T'Pau. It was released in 1998, and was the starting time T'Pau album since The Promise in 1991. Red would be vocaliser Ballad Decker'south terminal anthology/single release until the 2007 solo unmarried "Just Dream".

Background [edit]

Subsequently the original split of T'Pau in 1992, Decker attempted a solo career. In 1993, she contributed a track to the soundtrack of the film Muddy Weekend,[1] and performed a small number of live shows in the following year.[ii] In 1995, she released the unmarried "One Heart" equally the official anthem for the Halifax World Loving cup Rugby League Centenary '95.[iii] Information technology peaked at #130 in the UK.[4] By 1997, Decker made the decision to form a new line-upward of T'Pau and begin touring over again. A new version of the band's original hit "Heart and Soul" was released as "Heart and Soul '97", only it was not a commercial success.

Later a period of touring,[five] Decker recorded Ruddy between December 1997 to July 1998 at Roundhouse Studios in London. The album, which was released in September 1998, was supported by a 30-half dozen appointment tour named "The Cerise Tour". To promote the new anthology, a radio promo single, "With a Little Luck", was released. Farther promotional activities included a alive session for Virgin Radio and an advent on VH1, which Decker too filmed material for in New York. Later in November and December 1998, T'Pau supported Status Quo on the German and UK leg of their Tour "It's Good to Tour".[vi] Despite the touring, Ruby-red was not a commercial success, nor was a re-recorded version of "Giving Upward the Ghost", released in 1999.[7]

In a 2011 interview with Old Schoolhouse - Dorsum to the 80s, Decker spoke of the album: "I decided in 1998, after meeting a new director, to start piece of work again after years of no conviction. I would've loved to accept gotten the same level of success again [with Red] simply information technology didn't happen although I did sell a lot of albums on the road."[8] Speaking to Paul Sinclair of Super Deluxe Edition in 2013, Decker said: "I recorded Red when I was significant with my girl. I toured it upward and downwards the U.k., and then I went across Europe with Status Quo and I left her behind when she was six months old. I sulked my fashion across Germany – information technology was merely atrocious. I hadn't been a mum before. I left her safe and audio and well sorted, but I didn't accept into consideration being a new female parent, separated from her daughter after six months, with hormones raging... I was in bits."[ix]

Release [edit]

Ruby was initially released in mid-September 1998 in the Uk on CD, via Decker's own Gnatfish label.[x] [eleven] In the United States information technology would exist released as a two-disc assail November 9, 1999, via Renaissance Records. The second disc included iii tracks; the re-recorded "Centre and Soul '97", a live, unplugged version of the band's 1987 Uk number ane hitting "Prc in Your Hand", and the demo version of the Scarlet album track "Practise the Correct Trip the light fantastic".[12]

On 16 September 2007 the anthology was officially made available as a MP3 download from Amazon, including the Britain and Us.[13] [xiv] It was also fabricated available on iTunes.[xv]

Reception [edit]

Professional person ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic [sixteen]
Archetype Stone favourable[17]

In Jan 1999, Dave Ling of Classic Stone wrote: "Eight years on, T'Pau has very much become a vehicle for flame-haired siren Ballad Decker. Sonically, T'Pau still favour smooth, occasionally faceless walls of melody best exemplified on "Now That Y'all're Gone" and "Make Love to Me". Could have lived without the Big Country flavoured "Do the Correct Dance"; and surely Paul McCartney volition be suing Decker for re-writing Wings' "With a Footling Luck" and re-titling information technology "Wing and a Prayer"? Still, this is a solid plenty improvement album."[17] Heather Phares of AllMusic stated: "T'Pau returns with Carmine, its first album since 1991. The group's smooth pop sounds remain intact on songs like "With a Fiddling Luck," "At present That Y'all're Gone," "Giving Up the Ghost," and "Allow It All Autumn."[16]

Rail list [edit]

No. Championship Writer(s) Length
1. "With a Fiddling Luck" Carol Decker, Ronnie Rogers, J. David 3:40
2. "Now That You're Gone" Decker, Scott Taylor three:14
iii. "Practice the Right Trip the light fantastic" Decker, Rogers, D. Howard 4:18
4. "Wing & A Prayer" Decker, S. Darlow 4:00
five. "Giving Up the Ghost" Decker 4:54
6. "Brand Beloved to Me" Decker, Rogers, R. Feldman 3:28
7. "Say You Will" Decker, Taylor 3:08
eight. "Love Song" Decker, P. Harvey 4:36
9. "Allow It All Fall" Decker, Darlow four:36
10. "Sugariness Dreams" Decker, Rogers, J. Dunkley, G. Clayton, S. Boorer 4:06
1999 US CD issue bonus track disc
No. Title Author(south) Length
1. "Heart and Soul '97" Decker, Rogers 3:55
two. "China in Your Hand (Live and Unplugged)" Decker, Rogers 5:23
3. "Practise the Right Dance (Demo)" Decker 4:21

Personnel [edit]

  • Carol Decker – vocals
  • Jez Ashurst – electrical guitar, acoustic guitar
  • Scott Taylor – guitar (tracks 2, half dozen-7)
  • Spencer Cozens – keyboards (tracks 2, 4-7, 10)
  • Kat Evans – fiddle (track three)
  • Dan McKinna – bass
  • Dave Hattee – drums, programming on "Dearest Song"
  • Ray Weston – drums (tracks 3, 9)

Production

  • Ballad Decker – producer (all tracks)
  • Rafe McKenna - producer (tracks ane, iii, 8-9), mixing, engineer
  • Marco Sabiu - producer (track 1), programming (runway one)
  • Ronnie Rogers - producer (tracks iii, 9)
  • Simon Dawson, Feddy de Faye, Alan Jenkins, Roberto Pieroni – engineers
  • Jeremy Gill, Simon Morris, Peter Sberi – banana engineers
  • Robin – mastering

Other

  • Tom Howard – master photography
  • Patricia O'Niell – make up
  • Deluxe – design
  • Wye Media – artwork

References [edit]

  1. ^ http://www.tpausite.de/songs/songs.htm
  2. ^ "#TPau25 - 25 Years Of TPau and Ballad Decker: 1993/94". Tpau25official2013.blogspot.co.uk. Retrieved 2014-03-01 .
  3. ^ "Ballad Decker - One Heart (CD) at Discogs". Discogs.com. Retrieved 2014-03-01 .
  4. ^ "Nautical chart Log UK: Asher D - Dyverse". Zobbel.de. Retrieved 2014-03-01 .
  5. ^ "#TPau25 - 25 Years Of TPau and Carol Decker: 1997". Tpau25official2013.blogspot.co.uk. 2012-07-10. Retrieved 2014-03-01 .
  6. ^ "#TPau25 - 25 Years Of TPau and Ballad Decker: 1998". Tpau25official2013.blogspot.co.united kingdom. 1998-06-02. Retrieved 2014-03-01 .
  7. ^ "T'Pau Giving Upwardly The Ghost UK CD unmarried (CD5 / 5") (217750)". eil.com . Retrieved 29 Nov 2017.
  8. ^ "Dorsum to the 80s: Interview with Carol Decker from T'Pau - Kickin' it Former School | tBlog.com". Oldschool.tblog.com. Retrieved 2014-03-01 .
  9. ^ "Interview: Carol Decker". superdeluxeedition. Retrieved 2014-03-01 .
  10. ^ "Red". xiv September 1998. Retrieved 29 November 2017 – via Amazon.
  11. ^ "T'Pau - Scarlet". Discogs . Retrieved 29 November 2017.
  12. ^ "Carmine". 12 October 1999. Retrieved 29 November 2017 – via Amazon.
  13. ^ "Red". Retrieved 29 November 2017 – via Amazon.
  14. ^ "Reddish". Retrieved 29 November 2017 – via Amazon.
  15. ^ "Red by T'Pau on Apple tree Music". itunes.apple.com. 9 November 1998. Retrieved 29 November 2017.
  16. ^ a b T'Pau (1998-11-09). "Red - T'Pau | Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards". AllMusic. Retrieved 2014-03-01 .
  17. ^ a b "Classic Rock » The Archive » January 1999 » Page 74 » T'Pau". Archive.classicrockmagazine.com. Retrieved 2013-05-24 .

frankhaddle.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_(T%27Pau_album)

Post a Comment for "I Will Say It Again Pau"