714822940085
714822058520

Ragged Kingdom

June Tabor & Oysterband

Regular
£21.99
Sale
Regular
£21.99
Sold Out
Unit Price
per 

Format: LP

Cat No: TTSLP008

PRE-ORDER: This item will be shipped with the aim to deliver on release day.

Release Date:  04 October 2024

Label:  Topic

Packaging Type:  Slip Sleeve (CD or Vinyl)

No of Units:  1

Barcode:  714822940085

Genres:  Folk  Folk-Rock  

Release Date:  19 September 2011

Label:  Topic

Packaging Type:  Digipak

No of Units:  1

Barcode:  714822058520

Genres:  Folk  Folk-Rock  

  • Description

    Limited edition (750 copies) crimson vinyl re-issue of hugely-acclaimed collaboration between legendary English folk doyenne June Tabor and long-standing, hard-touring roots rebels, Oysterband, marks long farewell tour - Includes sublime renditions of Joy Division's 'Love Will Tear Us Apart' and John Parish/PJ Harvey's 'That Was My Veil.'



    June Tabor & Oysterband's 'Freedom And Rain' (1990) was hailed one of the finest collaborative folk albums of the past 4 decades . Bringing together the immense, individual talents of the sublime English folk singer Tabor and the raucous roots rebels Oysterband, it produced something quite not only new but enduring. When they reunited to perform at fRoots Magazine's 30th birthday party at The Roundhouse in 2010, they felt the chemistry spark again. And so, twenty-one years on, they went reconvened to record the magnificent 'Ragged Kingdom,' a brilliant, belated follow-up that mixes the traditional with the contemporary in startling fashion.



    The trad. 'Bonny Bunch Of Roses' rubs shoulders with PJ Harvey's 'That Was My Veil'; a lush, acoustic version of Joy Division's 'Love Will Tear Us Apart' nestles beside the Scottish trad. song '(When I Was No But) Sweet Sixteen'. Stylistically, the participants have each grown even more in stature in the intervening years. June becoming an eclectic song interpreter, drawing inspiration from many sources and Oysterband systematically re-exploring their own acoustic folk roots. Together, they bring all of this added artistic weight to the project yet with a deftness of touch.



    Ragged Kingdom was recorded first at Rockfield Studios near Monmouth and then at Metway Studios, Brighton, with Oysters' regular producer Al Scott, Feb to April 2011. "What unites the material on Ragged Kingdom" Telfer continues "is finding the story in the song, and the exact drama in the story: pop songs are often story songs too, and we tried to find things where the story wasn't banal, which had some shading in them.' Love Will Tear Us Apart is a great lyric, and so is 'The Dark End Of The Street'."

    Description

    Twenty-one years after June Tabor and Oysterband collaborated on the classic 'Freedom And Rain' album they've reconvened to record the magnificent 'Ragged Kingdom'.

    June Tabor & Oysterband's 'Freedom And Rain' remains one of the finest collaborative albums of the past three decades. Bringing together the immense, individual talents of the sublime English folk singer Tabor and the raucous roots rebels Oysterband, it produced something quite new and enduring. When they reunited last year to perform at fRoots Magazine's 30th birthday party at The Roundhouse, they felt the chemistry spark again. And 21 years on, they've made the brand new 'Ragged Kingdom', a brilliant, belated follow-up that mixes the traditional with the contemporary in startling fashion.

    The trad. 'Bonny Bunch Of Roses' rubs shoulders with PJ Harvey's 'That Was My Veil'; a lush, acoustic version of Joy Division's 'Love Will Tear Us Apart' nestles beside the Scottish trad. song '(When I Was No But) Sweet Sixteen'. Stylistically, the participants have each grown even more in stature in the intervening years. June becoming an eclectic song interpreter, drawing inspiration from many sources, and Oysterband systematically re-exploring their own acoustic folk roots. Together, they bring all of this added artistic weight to the project yet with a deftness of touch.

    "The spark" says Oysterband's Ian Telfer "is we really feel we do something together which is different from what we do as separate acts. There is something in the combination of June's exquisite dark voice with the supple energy of Oysterband that greatly pleases us. June comes to recording fantastically well prepared: every nuance of meaning and feeling considered in advance and plotted in her mind. Then she stands in the studio and delivers one perfect take, like an act of Chinese calligraphy. Or maybe Chinese cooking: the work is all in the preparation. We deliberately left some of the tracks just a little raw: the current zeitgeist definitely favours sounding 'real', and that's just fine by us."

    Ragged Kingdom was recorded first at Rockfield Studios near Monmouth and then at Metway Studios, Brighton, with Oysters'
    regular producer Al Scott, Feb to April 2011. "What unites the material on Ragged Kingdom" Telfer continues "is finding the story in the song, and the exact drama in the story: pop songs are often story songs too, and we tried to find things where
    the story wasn't banal, which had some shading in them.' Love Will Tear Us Apar't is a great lyric, and so is 'The Dark End Of The Street'."

    "Glorious" Colin Irwin Mojo *****

  • Tracklisting

      Disc 1

      Side 1

      • 1. Bonny Bunch Of Roses
      • 2. That Was My Veil
      • 3. Son David
      • 4. Love Will Tear Us Apart
      • 5. (When I Was No But) Sweet Sixteen
      • 6. Judas (Was A Red-Headed Man)

      Side 2

      • 1. If My Love Loves Me
      • 2. The Hills Of Shiloh
      • 3. Fountains Flowing
      • 4. The Leaves Of Life
      • 5. Seven Curses
      • 6. The Dark End Of The Street

    Tracklisting

      Disc 1

      Side 1

      • 1. Bonny Bunch Of Roses
      • 2. That Was My Veil
      • 3. Son David
      • 4. Love Will Tear Us Apart
      • 5. (When I Was No But) Sweet Sixteen
      • 6. Judas (Was A Red-Headed Man)
      • 7. If My Love Loves Me
      • 8. The Hills Of Shiloh
      • 9. Fountains Flowing
      • 10. 1The Leaves Of Life
      • 11. Seven Curses
      • 12. The Dark End Of The Street