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Death Or Glory

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Download links and information about Death Or Glory by Roy Harper. This album was released in 1992 and it belongs to Rock, Folk Rock, World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist genres. It contains 14 tracks with total duration of 01:03:34 minutes.

Artist: Roy Harper
Release date: 1992
Genre: Rock, Folk Rock, World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist
Tracks: 14
Duration: 01:03:34
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Death Or Glory? 5:05
2. The War Came Home Tonight 4:22
3. Duty 1:26
4. Waiting For Godot Part Zed 3:29
5. Next To Me 3:17
6. The Methane Zone 3:35
7. The Tallest Tree 4:52
8. Miles Remains 8:52
9. The Fourth World 7:22
10. Why? 0:44
11. Evening Star 6:04
12. Cardboard City 3:24
13. One More Tomorrow 5:22
14. On Summer Day 5:40

Details

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Roy Harper was spurred into making one of his best albums only after his wife abruptly left him in 1992, thrusting him into a deep despair. The rawness of Death or Glory?, and the fact that it was conceived after the bitter dissolution of a decade-long relationship, makes it the emotional, if not artistic, heir of John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band. The album shuns Harper's penchant for over-production in lieu of his more traditional acoustic sound. "The Tallest Tree" is a winning tribute to Chico Mendes with spiraling guitar work by Nick Harper. Harper is also positive in the winsome "Evening Star," which finds him finally recreating his classic early-'70s sound. Harper wrote the song for Robert Plant's daughter on her wedding, and even nicked the first line of "Stairway to Heaven" as a wink to his old mate from Led Zeppelin. Perhaps the album's finest moment is the mostly instrumental tribute to Miles Davis, "Miles Remains," which is not jazzy, but sounds instead like a more guitar-oriented Clannad. But the majority of the album is very pensive and bleak, including the bizarre, weepy spoken word piece that ends the record. The album was remixed in 1999 when Harper deleted some of the more gratuitous pieces in an attempt to make the album less depressing. In any form, Death or Glory? remains one of Harper's most satisfying works, and is his only release from the '90s that most casual fans will want to own.