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Track Listing 1. Flyer, The 2. Nobody's Angel 3. Say It Isn't So 4. Southbound Train 5. These Days in an Open Book 6. Time of Inconvenience 7. Don't Forget About Me 8. Always Will 9. Going Back to Georgia 10. Talk to Me While I'm Listening 11. Fragile 12. On Grafton Street 13. Anything You Need But Me 14. Goodnight to a Mother's Dream 15. This Heart
Album Notes Personnel includes: Nanci Griffith (vocals, guitar); Bill Dillon (acoustic & electric guitars, mandolin); John Keane (electric guitar, steel guitar, background vocals); David Mansfield (dobro, mandocello); Fran Breen (bass harmonica, drums); James Hooker (piano, Wurlitzer piano, harmonium, Hammond B-3, keyboards, background vocals); Dave Schools (bass); Jerry Marotta (drums, percussion); Pat McInerney (percussion); Pat McLaughlin, Lee Satterfield, Holly Tashian, Jennifer Kimball, Kathi Whitley (background vocals); Sam Llanas, Kurt Neumann, Mark Knopfler, Emmylou Harris, Mary Ann Kennedy, Pam Rose, Tony Levin, Peter Buck, Larry Mullen Jr., Adam Duritz, Adam Clayton, Indigo Girls, The Chieftains, Al Anderson, Sonny Curtis. Producers: Peter Collins, Peter Buck. Engineers: David Leonard, John Keane. FLYER was nominated for Best Contemporary Folk Album in the 37th Annual Grammy Awards. With FLYER, Nanci Griffith continues her successful reign as folk music's best country artist. Unlike Mary-Chapin Carpenter who brought a homogenous blend of pop country/folk to the masses, Griffith still struggles on the fringe. Griffith's music is more sophisticated than Chapin's, but it is her high-register, nasal twang that holds her back from mass popularity. But she doesn't mind -- she has a strong cult following and is well respected by her peers. It is the contribution of those peers that allows FLYER to soar. Griffith is joined by guitar virtuoso Frank Christian, the Indigo Girls, Emmylou Harris, The Chieftans, Adam Duritz of Counting Crows, and U2's Adam Clayton. They breeze through mostly Griffith originals, bolstered by Griffith's unique vocals which sometimes sound like Iris Dement, Suzanne Vega, or Shawn Colvin. Many songs have a strong British Isles influence, a region where Griffith is enormously popular. It was Nanci who first introduced Julie Gold's classic "From A Distance"; on FLYER she presents Gold's new "Southbound Train." Griffith spreads her own musical wings, flying from country and folk to Tex-Mex swing and rock. The Indigo's harmonies twist like vines with Griffith's vocal on "These Days In An Open Book" and Crows' Duritz does his Van Morrison slurry best on the duet "Going Back To Georgia." FLYER, like her classic LATE NIGHT GRANDE HOTEL, proves Griffith to be the most articulate spokeswoman of country folk.
Industry Reviews 4 Stars - Excellent - ...[her] latest batch of songs manage to be both her most familiar and candid... Q (10/01/1994)
4 Stars - Excellent - ...intricately sculpted folk pop...succeeds gloriously. Armed with a batch of poignant, melodic songs, Griffith has come up with the most affecting record of her career...a mature artist at the peak of her genre-busting career... Rolling Stone (12/01/1994)
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