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Happy to Meet, Sorry to Part (Bonus Tracks Version)

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Download links and information about Happy to Meet, Sorry to Part (Bonus Tracks Version) by Horslips. This album was released in 1973 and it belongs to Rock, Folk Rock, Hard Rock, Progressive Rock, Heavy Metal, World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist genres. It contains 18 tracks with total duration of 01:14:31 minutes.

Artist: Horslips
Release date: 1973
Genre: Rock, Folk Rock, Hard Rock, Progressive Rock, Heavy Metal, World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist
Tracks: 18
Duration: 01:14:31
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Happy to Meet 0:49
2. Hall of Mirrors 5:29
3. The Clergy's Lamentation 4:39
4. An Bratach Bán 2:04
5. The Shamrock Shore 4:34
6. Flower Amang Them All 2:04
7. Bím Istigh Ag Ól 3:43
8. Furniture 5:13
9. Ace and Deuce 3:35
10. Dance to Yer Daddy 4:37
11. Scalloway Ripoff 1:54
12. The Musical Priest 4:33
13. Sorry to Part 1:31
14. Hall of Mirrors (Recorded at Quartier Latin, Berlin 1976) [Live] 4:46
15. The High Reel (Recorded at Quartier Latin, Berlin 1976) [Live] 2:51
16. Rakish Paddy / Johnny's Wedding (Recorded at Quartier Latin, Berlin 1976) [Live] 5:23
17. Furniture (Recorded at Quartier Latin, Berlin 1976) [Live] 12:00
18. Bím Istigh Ag Ól [Recorded at Quartier Latin, Berlin 1976]   (Live) 4:46

Details

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Get ready for the ride of your life through Irish folk-rock styles. The opening track of the group's debut album, with its pipes, button accordion, and percussion, could pass for any Chieftains record, but then the electricity kicks in on "Hall of Mirrors," and the rest is melodic rock, not so much folk-rock as folkish rock, recalling early Genesis. John Fean sounds like he's playing folk melodies even as he plays runs on his electric guitar on "The Clergy's Lamentation," and the group follows this with an anthem-like piece of Gaelic rock ("An Bratach Ban") with a dance-like instrumental break. "Bim Istigh Ag Ol" is probably the best track on the album, and "Hall of Mirrors" and "Furniture" remained in their stage act for years, the latter, with its superb middle section — favorably recalling Steve Howe's playing with Yes on their early albums — transformed into a 15-minute epic. And just when you think you've got them pegged as a progressive folk-rock outfit, they deliver the exquisitely languid, almost impressionistic "The Shamrock Shore" and the playful "Dance for Yer Daddy," which sounds like the Chieftains with vocals until Fean's electric guitar kicks in. And Fean's playing on "The Musical Priest," by itself, is worth the price of the album. [Wounded Bird's 2008 reissue included one bonus track.]