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Album
On this startling, ever-shifting, album-length musical landscape, Shawn Phillips carries listeners across folk ("The Ballad of Casey Deiss") and rock styles, with a heavy R&B feel at times ("Song for Mr. C"), accompanied by a band and Paul Buckmaster's most restrained orchestrations. The first four songs spin out seamlessly, like a cross-genre Sgt. Pepper's, and the album never lets up, driven by Phillips' guitars and his guileless singing. Some of the titles, like "Song for Sagittarians," seem dated, but even that number has some great hooks and a catchy chorus. Curiously, the promise of the album cover, depicting Phillips solo with an acoustic Gibson 12-string, is fulfilled on the final track, "Steel Eyes," on which he sounds like a more soulful successor to his one-time collaborator Donovan. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
She Was Waitin' for Her Mother at the Station in Torino and You Know I Love Baby but It's Getting Too Heavy to Laugh
Shawn Phillips
Keep On
Shawn Phillips
Sleepwalker
Shawn Phillips
Song for Mr. C
Shawn Phillips
The Ballad of Casey Deiss
Shawn Phillips
Song For Sagittarians
Shawn Phillips
Lookin' Up Lookin' Down
Shawn Phillips
Remedial Interruption
Shawn Phillips
Whaz' Zat
Shawn Phillips
Schmaltz Waltz
Shawn Phillips
F Sharp Splendor
Shawn Phillips
Steel Eyes
Shawn Phillips