Dear Friends: An Evening with the Foreign Exchange

Dear Friends: An Evening with the Foreign Exchange is the live album of duo The Foreign Exchange, with supporting vocalists Jeanne Jolly and Sy Smith.[1] The album was recorded in February 2011, at SoundPure Studios in Durham, NC.[2]

Dear Friends: An Evening with the Foreign Exchange
Live album by
ReleasedJune 28, 2011
RecordedFebruary 2011
SoundPure Studios (Durham, NC)
GenreR&B, soul
Length57:54
Label+FE Music
ProducerThe Foreign Exchange
The Foreign Exchange chronology
Authenticity
(2010)
Dear Friends: An Evening with the Foreign Exchange
(2011)
Love in Flying Colors
(2013)

Background

The show was recorded February 2011 at SoundPure Studios in Durham, NC, The Foreign Exchange gave a private acoustic show for 40 randomly selected fans. The album features the full acoustic concert performed by the band's touring lineup of Zo!, Sy Smith, and Jeanne Jolly. The album also features songs from Connected, Leave It All Behind, Authenticity, and Zo!'s Sunstorm albums.

In addition to the live concert recordings, the release also features two studio tracks; "Steal Away" featuring Jeanne Jolly and "All the Kisses" featuring Amber & Paris Strother of indie soul trio KING.

Track listing

  1. Fight for Love
  2. All Roads
  3. Take Off the Blues
  4. Lose Your Way (Band Introduction)
  5. House of Cards
  6. Greatest Weapon of All Time
  7. Something in the Way She Moves
  8. Laughing at Your Plans
  9. Daykeeper / Daykeeper (chopped and screwed)
  10. I Wanna Know
  11. Steal Away (featuring Jeanne Jolly)
  12. All the Kisses (featuring Amber & Paris Strother of KING)

References

  1. Dear Friends: An Evening With The Foreign Exchange (Amazon). Amazon.com. Retrieved on February 22, 2012
  2. The Foreign Exchange's Dear Friends: An Evening with The Foreign Exchange. IndyWeekly. Retrieved on February 22, 2012
gollark: I like "respect" as "recognizing people as fellow humans who you should maintain some basic standard of niceness with". And "respect" as "admiring people based on achievements". And "respect" as "acknowledge people's opinions on things reasonably" and such. I do *not* like "respect" as "subservience"/"obedience" - the "respect for authority" sense. These are quite hard to define nicely and just get lumped into one overloaded word.
gollark: > I don't really like the term of "respect", because people use it to mean so many different often mutually exclusive things based on convenience then equivocate them in weird ways;
gollark: See, I consider this somewhat, well, worrying, given what I said about "respect" for authority figures being pretty close to "subservience" a lot.
gollark: "i will be respected here." implies EVERYONE, not just staff.
gollark: I don't think it ever really had those except one time when the debug interface [REDACTED]/
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