Cogs, Wheels & Lovers
Cogs, Wheels & Lovers is the twenty-first studio album by British folk rock band Steeleye Span. It was released on 26 October 2009.[1] It is the band's fourth studio album to feature the line-up of Maddy Prior, Peter Knight, Rick Kemp, Ken Nicol and Liam Genockey.
Cogs, Wheels & Lovers | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | October 2009 | |||
Recorded | 2009 | |||
Genre | British folk rock | |||
Label | Park Records | |||
Producer | Steeleye Span with Mark Ellis and Tony Poole | |||
Steeleye Span chronology | ||||
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The songs on the album are entirely traditional pieces. As such, this album marks a return to the band's early pattern of recording modern arrangements of traditional songs, and marks a departure of its tendency, demonstrated since the early 1980s, of doing both traditional songs and songs they wrote themselves.
Cogs, Wheels and Lovers was the last album to feature guitarist Ken Nicol.
Personnel
- Maddy Prior - vocals
- Peter Knight - violin, vocals
- Rick Kemp - bass, vocals
- Ken Nicol - guitar, vocals
- Liam Genockey - drums, percussion
Track listing
- "Gallant Frigate Amphitrite"
- "Locks and Bolts"
- "Creeping Jane"
- "Just as the Tide"
- "Ranzo"
- "The Machiner's Song"
- "Our Captain Cried"
- "Two Constant Lovers"
- "Madam will you Walk"
- "The Unquiet Grave"
- "Thornaby Woods", followed by the 'hidden track', "The Great Silkie of Sule Skerry"
gollark: bees
gollark: * nine categories
gollark: Anyway, regarding memory use, the best way is OBVIOUSLY the osmarks.net thing where it has a graph with something like seven different categories of used memory.
gollark: Actual question: thus which?
gollark: Question: I wish to interact with """matrix""". However, due to synapse memory use bad, I can *either* have a working homeserver thing with bridge support (for APIONET and whatever) or a somewhat experimental one without that but which will not utterly consume all RAM ever when joining big rooms.
References
- "Steeleye Span - Cogs, Wheels And Lovers - CDs at Play.com (UK)". Play.com. 18 October 2009. Retrieved 9 February 2012.
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