Английская Википедия:Catholic (album)

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catholic is the fourth solo album from Gavin Friday, written and recorded with musician Herbie Macken and released in 2011. It was released in Ireland on Good Friday (22 April),[1] 16 years after the release of his previous album, Shag Tobacco.[2] catholic deals with concepts of letting go and coming to terms with loss.[3] It was produced by Ken Thomas (Throbbing Gristle, Cocteau Twins, Sigur Rós)[4] and recorded in Dublin, Cork and West Yorkshire.[5] Patrick McCabe wrote the novella Requiem for the Dying for the album liner notes.[6][3] The video for "Able" was directed by Kevin Godley.[7]

Track listing

  1. "Able" – 4:47
  2. "Land on the Moon" – 5:07
  3. "A Song that Hurts" – 5:33
  4. "The Only One" – 4:16
  5. "Blame" – 4:54
  6. "The Sun and the Moon and the Stars" – 4:17
  7. "It's All Ahead of You" – 4:34
  8. "Perfume" – 3:34
  9. "Epilogue" – 3:09
  10. "Where'd Ya Go? Gone" – 4:41
  11. "Lord I'm Comin'" – 6:52

Personnel

  • Gavin Friday – vocals, backing vocals
  • Herbie Macken – keyboards, piano, guitars, backing vocals, piano, programming
  • Kate Ellis – cello
  • Andre Antunes – drums, percussion
  • Gareth Hughes – bass guitars
  • Anthony Drennan – electric guitar
  • Jolyon Vaughan Thomas – programming, electric guitars, bass, keyboards
  • Matthew Allsop – euphonium
  • Moya Brennan – backing vocals
  • Amy Odell – vocals, backing vocals
  • John Kelly – harmonica

Album title

The album's title is deliberately spelled with a lower case c to emphasise the word's original meaning: universal, for every man, with wide sympathies.[2][8] Friday stated he wanted to claim back the word from the Roman Catholic church.[9]

Album cover

The album's cover photo is based on and pays homage to the painting Michael Collins, Love of Ireland[10] by Sir John Lavery which depicts Irish revolutionary leader Michael Collins lying in state. Friday had seen the painting at the Sir John Lavery "Passion and Politics" exhibit[11] in Dublin at the Hugh Lane Gallery in September 2010.[9] The photo was taken by Perry Ogden.[12] Although the image sets up parallels between the turmoil of the birth years of an independent Ireland and the mid-2000s state of upheaval and political chaos, Friday has stated that this is "an emotional, not a political, album".[13]

References

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