Seventeen (Live Acoustic)
Download links and information about Seventeen (Live Acoustic) by Samples. This album was released in 2003 and it belongs to Rock, Folk Rock, Songwriter/Lyricist, Psychedelic genres. It contains 17 tracks with total duration of 01:16:05 minutes.
Artist: | Samples |
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Release date: | 2003 |
Genre: | Rock, Folk Rock, Songwriter/Lyricist, Psychedelic |
Tracks: | 17 |
Duration: | 01:16:05 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
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1. | Wild River (Colorado) [Live Acoustic] | 5:04 |
2. | Seventeen (Live Acoustic) | 4:58 |
3. | Seany Boy (Live Acoustic) | 3:21 |
4. | Sacred Stones (Live Acoustic) | 4:04 |
5. | Indiana (Live Acoustic) | 3:46 |
6. | Buffalo Herds and Windmills (Live Acoustic) | 4:39 |
7. | Last Summer (Live Acoustic) | 5:42 |
8. | Streets in the Rain (Live Acoustic) | 3:30 |
9. | Close to the Fires (Live Acoustic) | 4:58 |
10. | Losing End of Distance (Live Acoustic) | 4:33 |
11. | Little Silver Ring (Live Acoustic) | 4:15 |
12. | When the Day Is Done (Live Acoustic) | 4:47 |
13. | Blue (Live Acoustic) | 3:50 |
14. | Who Am I? (Live Acoustic) | 5:57 |
15. | We All Move On (Live Acoustic) | 3:24 |
16. | Feel Us Shaking (Live Acoustic) | 4:50 |
17. | Taking Us Home (Live Acoustic) | 4:27 |
Details
[Edit]With Seventeen, the Samples' Sean Kelly and Tom Askin strip down some of their band's most beloved songs and present them intimately to a mindful Quinnipiac College audience. More than just a souvenir of that evening, this compelling live disc — named for both the song and the number of tracks — gives band staples like "Who Am I?" and "Seany Boy" a welcome, relaxed feel. Recorded at the end of a nationwide acoustic trek, Kelly and Askin (along with Vertical Horizon's Ed Toth on percussion) perform their distinctive Sting-meets-the Grateful Dead material, using piano accents to warm these extracts from the Samples' songbook. Some could balk that Seventeen is a stopgap release between the outfit's last studio album, 2001's Return to Earth, and its imminent follow-up, but by breathing new life into aging numbers like "Feel Us Shaking" and "Close to the Fires" (both from their 1989 self-titled debut), these nuggets sound new again. ~ John D. Luerssen, Rovi