Universal Hall

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (48 ratings)
Universal Hall album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 43:54

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nice but not as good as fisherman's blues

butterflies

I loved fisherman's blues so I thought I'd give this a listen. I was not as excited - the style is a little different than fisherman -though Piece of Iona is very good.

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The most beatiful album ive ever experienced.

ergyl

Okay, im not realy in to this kind of music, i normaly download metal stuff, but this; have realy opened a new music side of me. mike sings with such a passion that nearly makes me cry, and so sleep. the best songs are the steady "the crist in you" the musical masterpiece "peace of iona" and the beatiful melodic piano piece "ive lived here before, that takes the qualety of the whole album too new hiegths. for me, this will always stand as giant. not only in folk and irish music but also as one of the best albums ive ever heard. thank you so much, thank you so much!

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Wonderful Stuff

ronnie4

"The Christ in You" and "Peace of Iona" are beautiful songs. These guys have been around for awhile and continue to make some extraordinary music.

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Wow, The Waterboys

jayseedee

I just joined tonight and while downloading the newest from The Alarm, and here in Michigan, where else could I find it, I noticed The Waterboys as a related artists. Wow, it's been awhile since I listened to and fell in love with these guys. I was a little disappointed at first that I couldn't find a lot of the more common artists, but when I realized what was available, like this, I couldn't be any more thrilled. Hook up the whole Waterboys catalog if you can!

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The internet saved music

tollking

Like lots of us, I find my music by listening to internet radio. I suffered through years of commercial radio in the '70's, '80's and early '90's. I hate the idiots that forced years of Barry Manilow, Elton John, and all the other crap on us. For instance they ruined beautiful songs like Zeppelin's "Stairway to Heaven" by overplaying it. And now I happen upon The Waterboys. Pure genius. And to think Mike Scott's been out there for years and I never knew it. Too bad this is the only CD here. Try "We will not be lovers" on Fisherman's Blues, CD1. What a songwriter!

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Hey emusic, more Waterboys, pleeeeeeez!!!

Kez

Ditto to the review below... I would only add - the track "Peace of Iona" is absolutely mesmerizing.

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Most underrated songwriter in history

2perishable

Rolling Stone once said that if Mike Scott were forced to become a shepherd, he would whittle a flute out of wood and create music. This album is evidence of that statement. Without a major label and a big budget he makes music from the soul. Mike, keep pouring out your soul through music. We are still listening. "This light...", "The Christ in You", "Peace of Iona" are favs...

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They Say All Music Guide

Mike Scott begins his eighth proper Waterboys record with the kind of laid-back intensity that fueled the group’s 1990 Celtic rock classic Room to Roam. “This Light Is for the World” is the inspirational headlight on a devotional train hauling 12 tunes through the heart of northeast Scotland. The album was named after Universal Hall, a theater run by the Findhorn Foundation, a spiritual community that Scott joined in 1992 and where he has continued to visit, write, and perform. The recorded Universal Hall is an entirely different vehicle than the group’s last offering, the noisy, dark, and aptly titled, A Rock in the Weary Land. Focusing on life, light, and sense of place, Scott, who describes the record as “full of love and fire,” has no qualms about his renewed religious fervor. In the sparse “The Christ in You,” he tells the listener, “I’m gonna look twice at you/Until I see the Christ in you.” Not everything is so heavy handed, though, and the tunes range from fun (“Always Dancing, Never Getting Tired”) to gorgeous (“Peace of Iona”) to psychedelic (“Seek the Light”). Lyrically, Scott has simplified, focusing on inspiration rather than conversation, often repeating the title of the song, as in the Nick Drake-cloned, “Every Breath Is Yours.” On the previous two records, Scott depended upon a rotating lineup of studio musicians to fill the holes he could not, which had a tendency to deflate the intimacy of his songwriting. The return of fiddler Steve Wickham is a welcome one, and he sneaks his way into every piece with delicious results. His gifts are most apparent on the epic title track, a tendril of wind that nearly achieves the tornadic catharsis of the mid-’80s, This Is the Sea-era Waterboys. Fans who yearn for those anthems of yesterday may find themselves cursing the enigma that is Mike Scott, but there’s no denying his vision. – James Christopher Monger

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