Sugar Candy Taxi
Download links and information about Sugar Candy Taxi by Kevin Coyne. This album was released in 1999 and it belongs to Blues, Rock, Songwriter/Lyricist genres. It contains 16 tracks with total duration of 44:53 minutes.
Artist: | Kevin Coyne |
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Release date: | 1999 |
Genre: | Blues, Rock, Songwriter/Lyricist |
Tracks: | 16 |
Duration: | 44:53 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
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1. | Sugar Candy Taxi | 2:46 |
2. | Porcupine People | 3:40 |
3. | Highway of Dreams | 1:47 |
4. | Happy Little Fat Man | 2:11 |
5. | The Garden Gate Song | 2:26 |
6. | I'm Into Your Game | 2:49 |
7. | My Wife's Best Friend | 2:55 |
8. | Little White Arms | 0:44 |
9. | Rusting Away | 1:36 |
10. | Bird Brain | 3:55 |
11. | Tiger Lilian | 2:53 |
12. | Fly | 4:12 |
13. | Almost Dying | 3:27 |
14. | Normal Man | 2:27 |
15. | It Hurts | 2:05 |
16. | Lancashire Song | 5:00 |
Details
[Edit]"I see this record as a return to roots, as a heartfelt blast from the soul," writes Coyne in the liner notes. That's an overdone sentiment when it comes to artists promoting their latest album, but in this case it is correct. With the exception, oddly, of the title cut, which has a mainstream flavor to the arrangement that seems to have been designed with picking up some airplay or something, the production is usually spare. And that is the context in which Coyne best shines, when his scratchy voice (made scratchier by age) and jagged guitar are at the forefront. (Auteurish artists such as Coyne are never made better by more production.) By the time he repeats "maybe I'm paranoid" throughout the second track, "Porcupine People," you know the eccentric, quasi-disturbed Coyne is back in town. Coyne's extemporized-sounding lyrics are usually witty and occasionally gripping, sometimes getting into territory — fooling around with "My Wife's Best Friend," the deranged despair of "Normal Man" — that will unsettle those who want music to soothe rather than provoke. Although much of this is the minimal folky art rock that typified his early '70s work, some care is taken for stylistic variety, as in the wheezy flutes that dance in the background of "Porcupine People, the free jazzy piano and sax of "Rusting Away," or the almost avant-garde gospel of the a cappella voices on "Little White Arms."