It Makes Me Glad
It Makes Me Glad was an album released by Glass Harp (band) in 1972. It would be the last studio album released by the band until Hourglass in 2003.
It Makes Me Glad | |
---|---|
Studio album by Glass Harp | |
Released | 1972 |
Recorded | Electric Lady Studios |
Genre | Rock, progressive rock |
Length | 38:00 |
Label | Decca Music Mill (2005 CD Re-Issue) |
Producer | Lewis Merenstein, Glass Harp |
In 2005, the album was re-issued by the Music Mill label. The reissue was digitally remastered, and contains updated/extended liner notes and a bonus track.
Track listing
- "See Saw" (Daniel Pecchio) – 2:12
- "Sailing on a River" (John Sferra) – 3:38
- "La De Da" (Daniel Pecchio) – 5:45
- "Colt" (John Sferra) – 3:23
- "Sea and You" (John Sferra) – 4:15
- "David and Goliath" (Phil Keaggy) – 2:50
- "I'm Going Home" (Phil Keaggy) – 2:50
- "Do Lord" (Phil Keaggy, John Sferra, Daniel Pecchio) – 4:22
- "Song In the Air" (Phil Keaggy) – 2:35
- "Let's Live Together" (Phil Keaggy, John Sferra, Daniel Pecchio) – 3:50
- "Little Doggie (Phil Keaggy, Daniel Pecchio) - (Bonus Track, 2005 Re-Issue)*
- The songs David and Goliath, I'm Going Home and Do Lord all merge into one another, creating one extended track. The three songs have become known to fans as The Trilogy.
gollark: That's not really a thing.
gollark: I suppose I could just do what vfmd does and ban emphasis within words, which would resolve some of the ambiguities.
gollark: They can't stop it *and* still make most SPAs work.
gollark: The trouble is that Markdown is nightmarish to parse because that might be the start of an emphasised region or also half of a bold thing.
gollark: I see. I will consider this, since the Markdown library I used has annoyed me enough that I'm annoyed.
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.