| | Troubadalic CD Troubadalic Discography of CDs
In the small village of St. Maurice de Navacelles on the Larzac Plateau, the evening, held by a mutual friend, unwound into a celebration of melody and harmony and all-round good feeling.Mike had moved to France in the summer, finally escaping from a life unfulfilled in London where he worked as a musician. After a hectic summer helping at a retreat centre, he now was keen to meet other players. To this end he took his baby guitar to St. Maurice.Starry was the nightPascale had been hankering for a more peaceful, independent way of life. The kind of freedom hard to find in the cities of Paris and Montpellier. Her being, full of song, couldn’t abide by the constraints of a good relationship gone bad, and a disillusion of playing in groups. On the wind that changes lifeWhen Mike played his songs – Castles, Song of the Scorpion, Minstrel True, Your Broken Heart Will Mend, they spoke to Pascale and her response was immediate and captivating. Her silvery voice adding joie de vivre to the melancholic stillness of Mike’s tunes. No-one present was left in any doubt that there was something happening here. By 3 in the morning the repertoire was exhausted. The two of them swapped details only to discover that they lived within a minute away from each other – some things are just meant to be!As they started to work together they grew ever closer, and the music became the expression of their love.Finally they arrived at being ‘Troubadélic’. New compositions, new ideas, sweet and sour. Like ‘Thursday Sad’ – their first new song as Troubadélic. It’s about turning a bad day around, like using the challenge of life to spur you onward. Songs of life with the insects of the Mediterranean humming in a chorus, singing for us. If you want to touch someone, sing from the heart – then they’ll get it! Troubadalic Music | Category | Folk Albums | | Label | CD Baby | | CD Universe Part number | 7516462 | | Catalog number | 147103 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | Aug 21, 2007 |
Troubadalic Songs | 1. | Clouds in My Head |
| 2. | La Porte Du PassA^ |
| 3. | Glastonbury Days |
| 4. | Castles |
| 5. | Follow the Rose |
| 6. | Living On Hope |
| 7. | Wooden Boats |
| 8. | Song of the Scorpion |
| 9. | Thursday Sad |
| 10. | Quixote |
| 11. | Your Broken Heart Will Mend |
| 12. | Rosemary Lane |
| Troubadalic Review
GuidelinesRemember to focus your comments on Troubadalic CD. Check our review guidelines for specific details regarding customer review policy. To submit your review, please fill out the above form and click "Submit Review." A staff member will then verify your review meets our guidelines. Upon approval, your review will be published within a few days. Please do not use this form to comment on web site errors or for order related questions. If you have concerns of this nature, please contact customer service by filling out this form.
Purchase Troubadalic CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Animal Collective Merriweather Post Pavilion CD (2009)
Troubadalic album
$12.95
| | Vic Chesnutt At The Cut CD (2009) Digipak
Troubadalic CD music
$12.89
| | Walter Brennan Old Shep CD (2000)
Troubadalic music CDs
$5.19
| | Joan Baez Original Master Series CD (1960) Remastered
Troubadalic songs
$13.69
| | Patty Loveless Sleepless Nights CD (2008)
Troubadalic album
$15.89
| | Fairport Convention Babbacombe Lee CD (1971) Bonus Tracks; Germany; Remastered
Troubadalic CD music
$10.59
| | Po Bobo Jobarteh Kaira Naata CD
$14.29 | | Temperance Seven Teaffor Eight CD (1989)
Troubadalic music CDs
$15.55
| | Gorgeous Djoon CD (2007) (Import)
Troubadalic songs
$11.89
| | James Higgins Neilston CD (2007)
Troubadalic album
$16.45 Neilston (around the 60s and 70s)That Wee Village on the HillNeilston is the last outpost on the Glasgow railway line. The track ends abruptly about 9 miles south west of Glasgow. A signpost bluntly states, “Neilston High.” Whether this message alludes to the village mentality or the geography is open for interpretation.The Neilston area isn’t exactly on the established tourist route. This is not a dramatic landscape. There are no craggy peaks or Niagara waterfalls, but every Neilstonian will gladly rant lyrical about places like Cowden Hall, The Killoch Glen, The Midgie Glen, The Pad, The Snypes, The Craigie, the Glanderson Dam and the Toad Wood. All these hidden corners stand as individual monuments of solitude. Neilston’s countryside is bleak, tough, and lonely. I believe these qualities are what gives it its character.Neilstonians are very proud of their roots. They even have their own anthem: “The Farmer’s Boy.” We would all sing it at Neilston Juniors football matches. Well, we’d sing the first line anyway, till it faded into “da da de da dum da cough cough.” Ah, but we did put a lot of passion into that one line.When I was wee, the Neilston Main Street had the aura of a ghost town. Abandoned buildings with broken windows lined the main street. I can remember when my father was laying a foundation for a large kennel in our back yard, he casually collected bricks for the job from the piles that lay amongst the rubble and carted them home in a rusty wheelbarrow. Amidst these ruins crouched a dingy wee cobbler shop with walls of straw and plaster. Nearby stood Mrs. Morton’s clothes shop with shelves piled precariously high with shoe boxes. On a crumbling corner stood John Fox's Sweet Shop. This establishment was little more than a cave. It was so black inside that I was never able to make out the far wall. The front door was always wide open and leather oilskin tarps carpeted the bumpy floor. In my head, I picture a stocky man leaning to one side like he was propping up a bar. He’s pointing to his sweetie selection which was displayed in a spotlit glass vitrine. He’s discussing individual specimens like they are his rare insect collection: ...
| | Richard Anderson Songs That Chose Me CD (2007)
Troubadalic CD music
$24.05 Richard Anderson has been performing since the 1990’s. He was part of Glasgow’s indie guitar scene then as one of the founder members of The Salad Days with Singer/lyricist Sheridan and Fratelli’s bass player Barry Fratelli. Together they gigged in 1995 doing a number of shows for Beatbox Promotions with songwriter John McLaughlin pushing. Anderson wishing to branch out on his own left The Salad Days after playing Glasgow Ten Day Weekend Festival at the end of that year and the group thereafter disbanded. A cassette single exists of three early songs, which Fratelli fans should check out!The following year saw Richard form his own combo Red Shelley who played in Glasgow during 1996 and 97 doing a number of university gigs and recording a couple of EPs These were the first experiences of singing publicly and fronting a band. Anderson was becoming unhappy with his day job in Glasgow involving a number of local government posts, and decided to leave the old smoke and return to his hometown to regroup. He had originally left Annan, Dumfriesshire where he was born and raised, for Glasgow at the age of eighteen to study social sciences at Glasgow Caledonian University. Not being naturally a big city animal Richard returned to Annan in 1998 and spent the ...
| | Incredible Adventures Of Back Porch Buddha CD (2007)
Troubadalic music CDs
$15.19
| | Trenches Boomball CD (2008) (Import) Import
$23.59 | | Unart 4 0 Neue Suiten CD (2008) (Import)
Troubadalic songs
$38.09
|
|
|