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Bryter Layter
(CD, 2003)
Primary Artist: Nick Drake

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LIST PRICE $10.99 Save 36%
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Format: CD Mar 2003 Record Label: Island Records (USA) Recording Type: Studio UPC: 766489900124 |
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In general items shipped via Media Mail should arrive in 2-9 days (excluding Alaska and Hawaii) from the time of shipping * ML=ships from multiple locations, AE/AP/AA=ships from U.S. Military location.
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Details

Track Listing 1. Introduction 2. Hazey Jane II 3. At the Chime of a City Clock 4. One of These Things First 5. Hazey Jane I 6. Bryter Layter 7. Fly 8. Poor Boy 9. Northern Sky 10. Sunday
Album Notes Nick Drake's 1970 album is reissued via this U.S. release. After crafting a debut album full of beauteous, somber chamber-folk, Nick Drake pulled something of an about-face with the follow-up, BRYTER LAYTER. With a bright, sparkling production and orchestrations that occasionally border on Easy Listening, the framework is light and airy where FIVE LEAVES LEFT was dark and foreboding. The key, however, is that Drake's artfully expressed inner turmoil peeks through at every turn in the lyrics and in his understated-but-heartfelt vocal delivery. "At the Chime of a City Clock" finds Drake facing existential despair at every turn, despite an almost-lugubrious string arrangement. Perhaps the crucial moment of BRYTER LAYTER occurs on "Poor Boy," where female backing vocalists literally mock the singer's anguished laments. Clearly, for as much as Drake's heart and soul were bared in every note of his music, he was self-aware enough to know that his disillusioned-romantic view of the world was one that put him on the fringes of society. Of course, some 25 years later, his early-1970s work would find a much wider audience, even though the initial era of the sensitive singer/songwriter had long since passed.
Industry Reviews ...With a voice paradoxically feather-light and grave, [one] of the most beautiful and melancholy albums ever recorded... Alternative Press (03/01/2001)
The exquisiteness of the first album is expanded upon in 'Hazey Jane I', 'Fly' and a genuinely optimistic love song, 'Northern Sky'... - Rating: B+ Entertainment Weekly (05/12/2000)
Ranked #14 in NME's list of The Greatest Albums Of The '70s. NME (09/18/1993)
...Certainly the most polished of his catalog....[It[ begins to suggest a whole other tableau of unexplored possibilities....God, how damn confident it all sounds. He knew how good he was... Mojo (07/01/2000)
Ranked #23 in Q's 100 Greatest British Albums - ...Few songwriters have given such perfect voice to the England of dreaming spires, tea cups and quiet desperation... Q (06/01/2000)
Included in Q's 5 Best Re-Issues of 2000. Q (01/01/2001)
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