Life Ain't Worth Living (in the Old-Fashioned Way)
Life Ain't Worth Living (subtitled (in the Old-Fashioned Way)) is the debut album by Downes and Beer, at the time known as simply "Paul Downes & Phil Beer", released in 1973 on stereo vinyl.[1][2]
Life Ain't Worth Living (in the Old-Fashioned Way) | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 1973 | |||
Genre | ||||
Label | Sweet Folk and Country | |||
Paul Downes & Phil Beer chronology | ||||
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Track listing
- "Peggy and the Soldier"
- "The Hunting of Arscott and Tetcott/Foxhunter's Jig"
- "Bonny Bunch of Roses"
- "Helen and Jan's Favourites"
- "The Snow It Melts the Soonest"
- "Banks of Newfoundland"
- "Spanish Ladies"
- "Low Down in the Broom"
- "Marrow Bones"
- "Macleod's Lament"
- "Both Sexes"
- "Tabhair Dom Da Lamh"
- "Life Ain't Worth Living"
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gollark: Kind of like with Trump, how he constantly does bad things but everyone's just immunized to it.
gollark: Maybe people are just used to police being reported as terrible quite a lot? Which isn't entirely unreasonable as America has a lot of police so even a low % being bad means you can pick out a lot of issues.
gollark: This is just so stupid though. We've had the ability to, you know, readably send text for ages. Before pictures. It's... why.
gollark: How do you *read* that?
References
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