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''Rude Awakening''〔''Andy Irvine – Rude Awakening'', Green Linnet GLCD 1114, 1991.〕 is Andy Irvine's second solo album, recorded in December 1990 and January 1991 at Westland and Ringsend Studios, Dublin and Frank MacNamara's Park Studio, Co. Meath, and released in 1991 on ''Green Linnet Records''.〔Sleeve notes from ''Andy Irvine – Rude Awakening'', Green Linnet GLCD 1114, 1991.〕 It was produced by Bill Whelan with a line-up that included Whelan himself (keyboards, percussion), Rens van der Zalm (fiddle, mandolin, guitar), Carl Geraghty (soprano saxophone), Arty McGlynn (guitars), Davy Spillane (whistle) and Fionnuala Sherry (fiddle).〔 ==Overview== This album features Irvine's tribute song to Woody Guthrie ("Never Tire of the Road"), alongside mainly self-penned material celebrating some of his many other heroes: *WW2 Swedish diplomat "Raoul Wallenberg", *Union organiser "James Connolly"—a traditional song for which Irvine wrote new music, *Mexican revolutionary leader Emiliano Zapata ("Viva Zapata!"), *Michael Dwyer ("Michael Dwyer's Escape"), *Antarctic explorers "Douglas Mawson" and Aeneas Mackintosh ("Rude Awakening"), and *American novelist Sinclair Lewis ("The Whole Damn Thing").〔 The only other traditional song is "Allan McLean", for which Irvine wrote new music also.〔 The sleeve notes of "Love To Be With You"〔—a poignant song of longing—show a faded, black & white photo of Vida, the heroine of "Rainy Sundays", the song Irvine released ten years earlier on ''Rainy Sundays... Windy Dreams''. 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「Rude Awakening (Andy Irvine album)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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