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PHOENIX FUTURE

Paul Brett

Prog Folk


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Paul Brett Phoenix Future album cover
2.05 | 2 ratings | 1 reviews | 0% 5 stars

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Studio Album, released in 1975

Songs / Tracks Listing

Side 1
1. Yesterday's Man (3:20)
2. Midnight Affair (3:25)
3. Les Nuits Des Camargues (3:10)
4. Grandma's Upright Piano (3:15)
5. Better The Devil You Know (3:45)
6. Liquid Lines (5:00)

Side 2
1. La Mer D'amour (3:52)
2. My Kind Of Day (2:42)
3. Trucking Queen (3:40)
4. Images Inocentes (2:30)
5. Catching Catfish (3:30)
6. Phoenix Future (4:10)

Total Time: 42:19

Line-up / Musicians

- Paul Brett / guitar, vocals
- DeLisle Harper / bass guitar
- Keith Warmington / harmonica
- Steve Holley / percussion
- Johnny Joyce / Twelve-String Guitar (Catching Catfish)
- Romie Singh / vocals (Liquid Lines, Catching Catfish)

Releases information

Phoenix Future (private pressing)
LP - Arcane - 913055
Arcane - 87035
Krypto ZAL 6417

Thanks to kenethlevine for the addition
and to kenethlevine for the last updates
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PAUL BRETT Phoenix Future ratings distribution


2.05
(2 ratings)
Essential: a masterpiece of progressive rock music(0%)
0%
Excellent addition to any prog rock music collection(0%)
0%
Good, but non-essential (50%)
50%
Collectors/fans only (50%)
50%
Poor. Only for completionists (0%)
0%

PAUL BRETT Phoenix Future reviews


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Collaborators/Experts Reviews

Review by kenethlevine
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR Prog-Folk Team
2 stars It's never a great sign when the best tracks on an album are the novelty songs, and when it's from way back in the 1970s, and sounds retro even for that time, well.... This is the 3rd and last of PAUL BRETT's vocal oriented solo albums from the 1970s, and likely the weakest. Its predecessor, "Clocks" was a soft folk rock exploration with country music encroaching here and there, while "Phoenix Future", in spite of its adventurous title, is ensconced in acoustic blues for want of a better single term that captures its character. His playing and singing are still fine but the songs don't really stand out except or a few catch phrases like "Yesterday's Man", "Grandma's upright piano" (the aforementioned standout), "La Mer D'Amour" (sic, sung in decent french!) and "Better the Devil you know" among them, while "Liquid Lines" struts a toe tapping rhythm. What's sorely missed in the arrangements are the violins, flutes, and keyboards of prior work; even a few strings would help. Brett is too skilled and amiable to fail completely at anything, but I would burn through all of his other 1970s output before raking in these ashes.

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