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Running From Home (An Introduction to Bert Jansch)

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Download links and information about Running From Home (An Introduction to Bert Jansch) by Bert Jansch. This album was released in 2005 and it belongs to Rock, Folk Rock, World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist, Psychedelic genres. It contains 21 tracks with total duration of 01:16:19 minutes.

Artist: Bert Jansch
Release date: 2005
Genre: Rock, Folk Rock, World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist, Psychedelic
Tracks: 21
Duration: 01:16:19
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. On the Edge of a Dream (Rock Baby Rock Remix) 2:39
2. Black Cat Blues 3:06
3. Looking for Love 4:24
4. Crimson Moon 5:26
5. Sweet Death 3:52
6. Downunder 4:58
7. How It All Came Down 4:13
8. The Mountain Streams 3:47
9. Sweet Rose 2:58
10. Lapwing 1:33
11. Bittern 7:48
12. The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face 2:57
13. The January Man 3:29
14. Sally Free and Easy 3:56
15. Nobody's Bar 3:00
16. Poison 3:12
17. Woe Is Love My Dear 2:17
18. Blackwater Side 3:42
19. Lucky Thirteen (featuring John Renbourn) 3:30
20. Running From Home 2:20
21. Angie 3:12

Details

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For a virtually unknown (in the United States) Scottish guitar player, Bert Jansch has had his fair share of anthologies. 1998's Blackwater Side and 2003's Legend: The Classic Recordings focused singularly on his late-'60s heyday, while 2002's two-disc Dazzling Stranger — still the superior choice — followed his career through the turn of the millennium. Castle's Running from Home: An Introduction To attempts to balance all three by sticking with a single disc and cramming it with 21 tracks that run the gamut from 1965-2002. Much like Hannibal' s Way to Blue: An Introduction to Nick Drake collection, Running from Home is ideal for the Jansch novice, but offers little to the seasoned listener. It lucidly follows the artist's career from dusty troubadour to Pentangle and back to dusty troubadour with a solid play list of well-known classics "Angie," "Blackwater Side," and recent pieces both studio-derived ("Black Cat Blues") and live ("How It All Came Down"). Running from Home is solid enough, though a Jansch collection without "Needle of Death" on it is like a Falco anthology without "Rock Me Amadeus."