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A Cat May Look at a Queen

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Download links and information about A Cat May Look at a Queen by Franklin Bruno. This album was released in 2002 and it belongs to Rock, Indie Rock, Pop, Alternative genres. It contains 13 tracks with total duration of 58:18 minutes.

Artist: Franklin Bruno
Release date: 2002
Genre: Rock, Indie Rock, Pop, Alternative
Tracks: 13
Duration: 58:18
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Dashboard Issues 5:12
2. Lies On Your Lips 3:56
3. Janet Shaw 5:46
4. I Blame You 3:50
5. Tired of the West 4:39
6. Threadbare 4:15
7. A Cat May Look at a Queen 3:33
8. Bulk Removal Truck 6:05
9. Callous 4:43
10. Dossier 5:34
11. Love's Got a Ghetto 3:38
12. Two Purple Shadows 3:27
13. Blue's the Only Color 3:40

Details

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Franklin Bruno's third solo effort finds the Nothing Painted Blue singer and Extra Glenns guitarist continuing to make his mark as one of the most intelligent songwriters of the 1990s and early 2000s. The disc opens with the wonderfully simple "Dashboard Issues," with Bill Magdziarz's synthesizer adding a rich touch to the opening. Jacob Valenzuela adds soulful trumpet to the fourth track, the callous eye-opener "I Blame You," which is followed by the gentle and radiant "Tired of the West." The title track was written with Lorenz Hart in mind. Hart was half of one of Broadway's most successful songwriting teams and had written a song entitled "A Cat May Look at a Queen," although only part of the song ever saw the light of day. Bossa nova influences reach their peak on "Love's Got a Ghetto," while Bruno's vocals dance atop wurtlitzer, bass, and cello on "Two Purple Shadows." The disc ends with the piano-laced "Blue's the Only Color," the only solo track on perhaps the most collaborative Franklin Bruno solo efforts to date. Guitarist Joey Burns, bassist Daniel Brodo, and drummer Tommy Larkins backed up Bruno on most of the tracks. Nothing Painted Blue drummer Kyle Brodie guests on percussion on two tracks, and Amy Domingues adds cello. Most of the album was recorded with Craig Schumacher at Wavelabe Studios in Tucson, AZ. The rest was recorded with David Trumfio of the Pulsars at Kingsize Sound Labs in Los Angeles. Berkeley, CA's Absolutely Kosher Records released the disc in September 2002.