Released 1970 Genre Folk music of Ireland | Revolution(1970) Hometown!(1972) Release date 1970 Label Tribune Records | |
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Similar The Dubliners albums, Folk music of Ireland albums |
The dubliners revolution
Revolution is the title of the tenth album by The Dubliners. It was their second to be produced by Phil Coulter. This was a landmark in their career. Their sound had developed and Coulter, as well as playing piano on the record, had brought in other instrumentalists as well. The album featured "Scorn Not His Simplicity", a song that Coulter had composed about his own son, who had Down's syndrome, as well as a poem penned by Luke Kelly entitled "For What Died The Sons Of Róisín?".
Contents
Alabama 58 the dubliners
Side One
- "Alabama '58"
- "The Captains and the Kings"
- "School Days Over"
- "Sé Fáth Mo Bhuartha"
- "Scorn Not His Simplicity"
- "For What Died the Sons of Róisín?"
- "Joe Hill"
Side Two
- "Ojos Negros"
- "The Button Pusher"
- "The Bonny Boy"
- "The Battle of the Somme/Freedom Come-All-Ye"
- "Biddy Mulligan"
- "The Peat Bog Soldiers"
Songs
1Alabama 583:24
2The Captains and the Kings3:36
3School Days Over3:03
References
Revolution (The Dubliners album) Wikipedia(Text) CC BY-SA