Leo sayer discography rar
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The best album by Leo Sayer is Just A Boy which is ranked number 21,328 in the overall greatest album chart with a total rank score. Another Year might not be the last of his truly enjoyable albums, but it is certainly the last that can be described as essential listening.Here's that big record producer of the 70's 'Richard Perry' taking on 'Andy Williams'.he certainly worked with some of the great singers and produced some brilliant L/P's.He's worked with 'Barbra Sriesand' 'Ella' 'Leo Sayer' and loads more just check him out on 'Google' to see how diverse he is!!All the songs on this L/P are contempory of the song composers of the 1970's.and not a standard in sight!!best track for me was 'Make It Easy For Me'.and a great different version of 'Walk Right Back'!!! Make It Easy For Me 3. and begun the long drive into AOR safety and respectability. Within a year, Sayer would have relocated, physically and mentally, to L.A. How quickly, however, such realism would be forgotten. Just three albums into his career, and already Sayer was contemplating how it might all end - confirming an honesty and, if you will, a fearfulness that plays its own part in Another Year's overall success. Goode," examining the final days of a fallen pop star (prize lyric: "we should have booked the audience rather than.the band"). The flip of this dingy coin comes with two songs certainly written from the other side of Sayer's own pop stardom - "The Kid's Grown Up," which contrasts his own modern lifestyle with the little boy he used to be, and "The Last Gig of Johnny B. Monty Python fans, meanwhile, will certainly enjoy some of the voices Sayer employs as this near mini-opera winds on. Name checking everything from the hero's van (a blue Morris - what else?), to a road map of the region, a lengthy lyric and convoluted arrangement follows the adventures of a pair of young lovers as they elope to Gretna Green, a Scottish border town renowned for allowing walk-up weddings. And the vaudeville air of "The Old Dirt Road" celebrates the tramps and hoboes of an earlier age, glorying in their freedom from the cares of conventional life and not caring a fig for poverty or dirt: "gotta sixpence in my pocket, I'm a millionaire." Sayer's fascination with the working-class lifestyle reaches its apogee with "Moonlighting," a 1976 hit single that is both wholly international and irretrievably English. The title track, too, has a seedily downtrodden air, celebrating the passing of another year ("'75 is here") by wondering how the calendar can change when the singer's life remains the same.
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The opening "Bedsitterland" sets the scene in a style that wouldn't have been out of place on an Al Stewart album, with lyrics that certainly echo Ralph McTell's "Streets of London" - "I've slept in the gutter on a summer's day, I've bummed cigarettes in the night cafes." Indeed, later in the cycle, "Streets of Your Town" draws that latter parallel even closer, all but paraphrasing McTell's original lyric to transplant the sorry story to Any City, U.K.
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Leo Sayer's third album continues in the grand tradition of its predecessors, centering its concerns around the lives and loves of the sad and lonely of the British metropolis.