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Specials encore album
Specials encore album














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Specials encore album update#

We are entitled to update the price on the website from time to time to take account of any increase in our supplier’s prices, or the imposition of any new taxes or duties, or if due to an error or omission on the price published for the goods on our website is wrong. (some of these web prices are cheaper than in-store, so please mention that you've seen these offers online)Į&OE. Prices valid in store (all including VAT) until close of business on 02nd February 2022. For now, this will do very nicely indeed.Īuthor: Ian, Romford store More In Entertainment I hope that as the title suggests it might not be a final word from the group, if their intent can be honed and focussed, they can come up with something truly remarkable. But the main event is the triumphant return, a deserved number one. It closes with a wonderfully dry and droll version of John Barry and Hal David’s Bond moment ‘We Have All the Time in the World’. There is a ‘Deluxe’ edition of the album available with a fine – mainly hits based – live collection on disc 2. Whether or not in another 40 years the world will be racially and in doctrine united remains to be seen but one can only hope. Closer ‘We Sell Hope’ is a trance Massive Attack type track whose message closes the album on exactly the same note as the opener begins it. ‘Embarrassed By You’ tries to address today’s younger generations’ hoodie and knife/crime culture but for me is lyrically just a little hackneyed, not quite working, but only not quite, as despite these feelings I still love the track. ‘Breaking Point’ is a sort of ska vs Laurel and Hardy moment of brilliance, it’s jaunty comical beat and musicality are at odds with its message of society snapping. ‘Vote For Me’ is classic Specials zeroing on the hypocrisy of modern politics and fake promises and leans on the echoes of ‘Ghost Town’ very nicely. The remaining four musical originals perhaps pack less punch overall than the monologue songs. And Terry Hall covers his and many others battles with depression on ‘The Life and Times of a Man Called Depression’ with style and dignity. Guest vocalist Saffiyah Khan (the activist and model who memorably faced down an EDL member at a rally in Birmingham) is forceful and direct and the song is fine addition to another Specials long standing cause. ’10 Commandments’ is a reply song to Prince Buster’s ‘Ten Commandments of Man’, a misogynistic reggae hit from 1967. Following on a similar musical vein from the funky opening track it hints at quite a different Specials sound, but the band’s brand of Ska is prevalent over the rest of the LP. ‘BLM’ relates the strife of those arriving in the UK via The Windrush and similar vessels right through to problems in modern America via Lynval Golding’s own life experiences. The Valentine’s “Blam Blam Fever” (previously released on one of the forgotten Specials cover albums) is an ear worm of the highest order, a bouncy reggae/pop track tackling the issue of gun crime in Jamaica and smartly updated with a final verse referencing todays USA gun issues. This version shows what a deserving follow up it would have been, not much different from the original hit but just a little more ‘Special(s)’. It was for a while the mooted followup to number one single “Ghost Town” and so deserves its place in the Specials song roster. “The Lunatics” was originally released by the group Fun Boy Three, which featured three former members of The Specials. So essentially The Specials’ message is as relevant in the modern world as it ever was, perhaps this is partly why this album has resonated so much with fans in 2019. Sadly, all these years after the song’s composition, racism is still an issue in society, sport, politics and many other walks of life, and sadly an issue that the Specials have always addressed right from their multi-cultural early hit-laced phase that the world has still failed to resolve. Opener “Black Skinned Blue-Eyed Boys” was written by Eddy Grant and released by his group The Equals and is a funky call for the people of the world to unite, no matter creed or especially colour. Encore is the eighth studio album by the English ska revival band The Specials.Įncore has three cover songs on the record.














Specials encore album