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Richard Digance Poems, Volume 2

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Download links and information about Richard Digance Poems, Volume 2 by Richard Digance. This album was released in 1975 and it belongs to Humor genres. It contains 17 tracks with total duration of 01:01:52 minutes.

Artist: Richard Digance
Release date: 1975
Genre: Humor
Tracks: 17
Duration: 01:01:52
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. The Great Fire of London 4:23
2. French Monologue 5:06
3. Why Questions 4:37
4. McFinn from Scotland 2:24
5. Amazing Facts 1:59
6. The Lemming 1:28
7. The Ants at the Olympics 1:50
8. Bethnal Green 3:03
9. Christopher Columbus 4:37
10. Eric the Elephant 5:37
11. Fred Higgins 6:55
12. If I Lived My Life Again 2:03
13. Maurice the Mayfly 4:11
14. Paul the Crab 3:16
15. The Chemist Shop 4:23
16. The Old Women Who Lived in a Shoe 2:24
17. The World's Worst Magician 3:36

Details

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Digance's reputation as one of Britain's hardest-working folk comedians is more than born out by his debut album. All nine tracks share the same bittersweet nostalgic mood, whether Digance is eulogizing boxer Joe Louis ("The Joe Louis Story," of course) or rhapsodizing London's River Thames ("Dear River Thames"); the gently sad "Edward Sayers' Brass Band" will strike a chord with anyone who fell in love with the movie Brass Tacks and "I Hear the Press Gang" follows in the footsteps of several centuries worth of seaboard laments. Some of the arrangements — strictly mid-'70s as they naturally are — sound dated, as the band moves toward cod reggae, light funk, and sub-Eagles sensitivities. Digance's unaccompanied "Drag Queen Blues" and "Dear River Thames" are closer to the magic he conjures on his better, later albums. But there are some marvelous moments here regardless; the presence of guest Michael Chapman guarantees the guitars are never less than edgy, Martin Jenkins (of Hedgehog Pie fame) throws some excellent fiddle and mandolin into the brew, and Steeleye Span drummer Nigel Pegrum keeps everything thundering along. Plus Digance himself is so naturally captivating that one could set his lyrics to a telephone ringing and he'd still have listeners on his side.