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The Last Angry Man (Bonus Tracks Version)

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Download links and information about The Last Angry Man (Bonus Tracks Version) by Steve Ellis. This album was released in 1978 and it belongs to Rock, Theatre/Soundtrack genres. It contains 17 tracks with total duration of 01:14:56 minutes.

Artist: Steve Ellis
Release date: 1978
Genre: Rock, Theatre/Soundtrack
Tracks: 17
Duration: 01:14:56
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Life User 5:25
2. Hear Your Woman 3:15
3. Hang On Joey 4:37
4. Rag and Bone 4:52
5. Everlasting Love 2:52
6. Blackmail 2:33
7. Wind and a Lady 5:00
8. Soothe Me 2:41
9. Why Do the Good Guys Die 4:35
10. The Last Angry Man 3:28
11. El Doomo (Bonus Track) 5:08
12. Shark Shoes (Bonus Track) 4:04
13. I Lost My Feelings (Bonus Track) 4:15
14. She's Leaving (Bonus Track) 4:53
15. War Train (Bonus Track) 6:35
16. Hold On (Bonus Track) 7:22
17. Warm Love (Bonus Track) 3:21

Details

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In 1977, ex-Love Affair singer Ellis recorded an album called The Last Angry Man with producers Tony Meehan and Dave Courtney. When Meehan and Courtney had a dispute, the album was withdrawn, although some cassette copies were issued by Ariola briefly in 1978. This CD marked the first time the album was widely available, with the addition of seven previously unreleased bonus tracks recorded in 1983. Ellis was in the tradition of British rock/soul/blues belters such as Steve Marriott (his closest vocal counterpart) and Rod Stewart, and there are also traces of Robert Plant and Van Morrison. He was not nearly in the same league as any of those singers, mind you, but he was OK. A couple of name guitarists (Albert Lee and Henry McCulloch) contributed to the sessions on The Last Angry Man, which yielded average though unobjectionable mainstream late-'70s rock with shades of folk-rock, mellow singer/songwriting, blue-eyed soul, and hard rock riffing. The seven 1983 songs (subtitled as the Basement Days portion of this disc) are again generic 1970s-type British rock, though the material is weaker, and the style by this time not at all in sync with what was either hip or commercial. The most interesting aspects of this archival release, to be honest, are the thorough liner notes, which cover Ellis' entire career dating back to the Love Affair days.