Will I Ever Be Inside Of You

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 52:31

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Surprise

EMUSIC-00C83B63

Suddenly his name came into my mind. There is not that much information about Paul Quinn on the Internet to find. But his music is here. For me the first song - Will I ever be inside Of You - is one of my favourites of all time. It's more then 9 minuten long, but not a second to long. Can anyone tell where Paul Quinn is?

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Where oh where!

mrshack

Where is Paul quinn? I've loved this man since he released 2 songs in a band called Bourgie Bourgie. Honestly! Dig out what you can from him. In 24 years I can only recall 2 albums Which he released with the independant group. A couple of singles with Edwyn Collins. 2 with bourgie bourgie and a 1 he recorded with Vince Clarke. I think he was also in a band called The Jazzateers. This album is available on e music. Not much output in nearly 30 years. But worth findingif you can.

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Exquisite pop for grown ups

singtothestars

This is one of the best 3 albums of the 90's. (Boatman calls by Nick Cave as you're asking). Beautiful, nightime pop. It appears unlikely that we will hear from him again but despite the heady claims in the generic review this was not his debut. 2 years earlier he and the Independent Group released the sublime 'Phantoms and the Archetypes' on Postcard produced by Edwyn Collins. It is deleted so you may have to hunt it down but good music is worth it.

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Postcard Records!

tjb81

Wow...a surprise to see this here. Not exactly Orange Juice, the Go-Betweens or Aztec Camera, but it's from Postcard Records. Yahoo!

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They Say All Media Guide

Glaswegian ex-Orange Juice” backing vocalist Paul Quinn finally brought his own rich deep tones to the fore on his 1995 debut, Will I Ever be Inside of You, cut alongside a coterie of musicians including fellow Orange Juice-ers Alan Horne and James Kirk.

Within the framework of the Independent Group, Quinn’s so-distinctive voice, which lands somewhere between Bowie, Lloyd Cole” and Scott Walker, spins out in front of what amounts to a series of interesting, but unobtrusive, backing melodies. The opening title track is a dirgy, longing lament loaded with odd electronic bits and pieces, as well as an ethereally brief chorus. “Lover, that’s you All Over” meanwhile, is a sparse, guitar twang that vividly repaints some of the alternative post punk’s gloomier acoustics. And, while the rest of Will I Ever be Inside of You follows along in the same sort of vein and, while it’s also true that Quinn doesn’t break any new ground, there are some absolute gems in the set, as “Misty Blue” unravels like some long lost ballad spun through cobwebs, and the closing “At the End of the Night”, with its subtly buried rhythm, plays out a somewhat beery, and completely fitting nightcap.

Often startling, Quinn loads Will I Ever be Inside of You with unexpected dips and twists, keeping the mood fairly somber, but ensuring that anyone taking the chance can’t settle in and kick back too easily. Sweet and just slightly sinister, this set can’t be ignored — it’s gorgeous fodder for the older doom and gloom set. – Amy Hanson

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