The Dubliners - 25 Years of Celebration (1994) [FLAC]
- Type:
- Audio > FLAC
- Files:
- 39
- Size:
- 558.9 MB
- Tag(s):
- Irish Folk Celtic
- Uploaded:
- Feb 19, 2013
- By:
- rambam1776
--------------------------------------------------------------------- The Dubliners - Celebration --------------------------------------------------------------------- Genre................: Folk Year.................: 1987 Codec................: LAME 3.98 Version..............: MPEG 1 Layer III Quality..............: Standard, (avg. bitrate: 183kbps) Channels.............: Joint Stereo / 44100 hz --------------------------------------------------------------------- Tracklisting --------------------------------------------------------------------- 01 - Dubliners 02 - Rose Of Allendale 03 - Salonika 04 - Reels a) Cooleys. b) The Dawn. c) Mullingar Races 05 - Now I'm Easy (with Stocktons Wing) 06 - Sally Wheatley 07 - Oro Se Do Bheatha 'bhaile 08 - Irish Rover (with The Pogues) 09 - Molly Malone 10 - Protect And Survive 11 - Planxty Irwin (with Michael Howard - Classical Guitar) 12 - Three Score And Ten 13 - Don't Get Married 14 - Luke - A Tribute (Christy Moore) 15 - The Ballad Of St. Anne's Reel 16 - Cill Chais 17 - Cunla 18 - Clavelitos 19 - The Humours Of Glendart Saddle The Pony Brian O'Lynn 20 - Leaving Nancy 21 - O'Connell's Steam Engine 22 - Rambling Rover 23 - Last Of The Great Whales 24 - The Rare Auld Mountain Dew 25 - Red Roses For Me 26 - Marino Waltz 27 - Cod Liver Oil 28 - I Loved The Ground She Walked Upon 29 - Love Is Pleasing 30 - The Sick Note Playing Time.........: 01:46:02 http://www.allmusic.com/artist/the-dubliners-mn0000143494 Nearly three decades since they first came together during informal sessions at O'Donoghue's Pub in Dublin, the Dubliners remain one of the most influential of Ireland's traditional folk bands. Unlike their counterparts The Clancy Brothers, the Dubliners have never strayed from the raw looseness of the pub scene. According to Dirty Linen, "Whereas The Clancys were well-scrubbed returned Yanks from rural Tipperary, decked out in matching white Arab sweaters, the Dubliners were hard-drinking backstreet Dublin scrappers with unkempt hair and bushy beards, whose gigs seemed to happen by accident in between fist fights".