Create account Log in

For Peace Comes Dropping Slow

[Edit]

Download links and information about For Peace Comes Dropping Slow by Jackie Leven. This album was released in 1998 and it belongs to Rock, Folk Rock, World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist, Psychedelic, Celtic, Folk genres. It contains 16 tracks with total duration of 01:15:17 minutes.

Artist: Jackie Leven
Release date: 1998
Genre: Rock, Folk Rock, World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist, Psychedelic, Celtic, Folk
Tracks: 16
Duration: 01:15:17
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $8.99
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Jesus Bodybuilder Blues/Cocaine Blues Cannot Keep from Crying 9:16
2. Artic Sex 2:06
3. Uist Tramping Song 4:41
4. Sacred Bond 6:51
5. Call Mother a Lonely Field 5:21
6. Fear of Women 4:49
7. Sexual Danger 2:24
8. Acid Roast Beef 2:20
9. Poortoun 5:40
10. Whisky Story 0:44
11. Desolation Blues 5:31
12. Jackie Losing It 3:49
13. Marble City Bar 7:35
14. Pale Blue Eyes 3:12
15. Main Travelled Roads 4:36
16. Slim Slow Slider 6:22

Details

[Edit]

This was a fan club release that made it out into the general public — unlike the rest of the Jackie Leven live fan club only releases — it's a solo acoustic performance at the Twelve Bar Club in London. It's the first evidence in the U.S. of Leven's rambling, rowdy, soulful live style — including a showcasing of his amazing guitar playing. There are 12 tunes in all, including the unreleased "Jesus Bodybuilder Blues/Cocaine Blues/Cannot Keep From Cryin'," as well as covers of "Pale Blue Eyes" and "Slim Slow Slider." There are a few jokes and stories to give a homey feel to the proceedings down on Denmark Street that night in 1997. The lion's share of the material comes from The Mystery of Love Is Greater Than the Mystery of Death, Forbidden Songs of the Dying West, and Fairy Tales for Hard Men. The acoustic renderings of studio songs such as "Call Mother a Lonely Field" and "Marble City Bar" are transformed into communal conversations, where everyone is in on the secret from the jump. On the other side, the more intimate songs from those records, the stripped-down tunes such as "Pourtoun," "Desolation Blues," and "Sexual Danger" become even more jagged in their poignant, decimating tales of grace and grief. Finally, Leven pulls out an old Scottish traveling song and a solo rendering of one of Doll by Doll's most stunning treasures: "Main Traveled Roads." This is a folk song, a love anthem, and the tale of a spiritual quest, all wrapped up in its final lines by the words of Yukio Mishima: "Eternal is the warrior who finds beauty in his wounds." Leven, who's seen the underside more than once, has always snapped back and taken these words as his personal anthem. He seems to turn those wounds, whether they are revealed in an intimate live setting or on a full-blown rock record, into practical — if romantic — wisdom with ferocity of heart.