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''Another Son'' was the second full-length album, and final recording, by Four to the Bar, released in 1995. The album was a radical departure from their first, 1994's ''Craic on the Road''. The band is listed as producing the album. Engineer Tim Hatfield has also been credited with playing a significant role in the success of the record. == Track listing == #"The Newry Highwayman" (Traditional) #"Another Son" (Kelleher) #"The Western Shore" (Clifford) #"Shelli Sullivan's/Passing My Time/Marie Harvey's Delight" (O'Neill) #"NY's for Paddy" (Yeates) #"Something's Come In" (Kelleher) #"Catch the Wind" (Donovan) #"The World Turned Upside-Down" (Rosselson) #"The Shores of America" (Kelleher) #"The Old Men Admiring Themselves in the Water" (W.B. Yeats (lyrics); Clifford (music)) #"Skibbereen" (Traditional) #"Getting Medieval" (Traditional) #"No Matter Where You Go" (Kelleher) *"Something's Come In" was covered by the McKrells (from Saratoga Springs, NY) on two separate albums: 1997's ''Better Days'' and 1999's ''The McKrells Live.'' *"The Old Men Admiring Themselves in the Water" is a W.B. Yeats poem set to music. *"No Matter Where You Go" was rehearsed for weeks as a bluegrass number, and only changed to the albums’ "Celto-Calypso" version during the recording sessions. *The title of "Getting Medieval" was taken from the dialog of the film ''Pulp Fiction.'' *An early version of "Passing My Time" appeared on the band's 1993 EP. *"NY's for Paddy" was the first song that David Yeates ever wrote. *"NY's for Paddy" appears in iTunes' "Essential St. Patrick's Day Music" collection. *Rossbeigh, referenced in "The Western Shore," is a beach in Glenbeigh, Co. Kerry, songwriter Patrick Clifford's ancestral home. *"Skibbereen" is dedicated to Martin Kelleher's parents. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Another Son」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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