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The Best of Matt McGinn

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Download links and information about The Best of Matt McGinn by Matt McGinn. This album was released in 2001 and it belongs to World Music, Pop, Songwriter/Lyricist genres. It contains 25 tracks with total duration of 01:11:12 minutes.

Artist: Matt McGinn
Release date: 2001
Genre: World Music, Pop, Songwriter/Lyricist
Tracks: 25
Duration: 01:11:12
Buy on iTunes $12.99
Buy on iTunes $12.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. The Dundee Ghost 2:43
2. The Footba' Referee 2:54
3. Gallowgate Calypso 2:33
4. Honesty Is Out of the Fashion 2:42
5. Little Ticks of Time 3:23
6. Coorie Doon 3:36
7. The Ballad of John Mclean 3:47
8. Willie Macnamara 2:02
9. Rosy Anna 1:57
10. The Boys of Lisbon 2:48
11. The Red Yo Yo 2:49
12. The Ballad of Q4 3:17
13. On the Road to Aldomaster 2:50
14. Rob Roy Macgregor 1:44
15. Lots of Little Soldiers 2:41
16. The Pill 1:58
17. Bingo Bella 2:50
18. I'm Looking for a Job 2:21
19. Big Sammy 3:18
20. The Rolling Hills of the Border 3:41
21. Morning Elanora 1:47
22. The Heilan' Man 3:58
23. Three Nights & a Sunday 3:11
24. I Have Seen the Highlands 3:51
25. Eternity Will Soon Be Over 2:31

Details

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Scottish singer Matt McGinn was an important contributor to the British Isles folk revival during the '60s and '70s, and his early death in 1977 left him less-known than one would hope. A singer, socialist, songwriter, moralist, and humorist, McGinn was a folkie who never learned to play a folk instrument. His traditionally based songs cover political subjects ("Lots of Little Soldiers"), humorous subjects ("The Dundee Ghost"), or best of all, humorous political songs ("The Pill"). This latter song is one of the highlights of the album, a concoction that could only have been dreamed up by someone raised Catholic. He slyly suggests that 22 children may be one or two too many. "I'm Looking for a Job" carries the wonderful refrain, "I'm looking for a job with a sky-high pay, a four-day week, and a two-hour day." Who isn't? "The Rolling Hills of the Border" has a romantic, melancholy lyric that pays tribute to his native land, and this mood is sustained on "I Have Seen the Highlands." The acoustic arrangements are simple throughout, allowing McGinn's voice and lyrics to be front and center. Of course everyone — meaning every non-Scot — may not be able to decipher all of the accented words, but it doesn't really matter. Everything sounds lovely. The Best of Matt McGinn is a fine collection of songs from throughout his career. The songs will take many folk lovers back to the heady days of the '60s when song lyrics were filled with righteousness and straightforward innocence. This is an enjoyable anthology. ~ Ronnie Lankford, Jr., Rovi