Blue Skies & Free-Rides: The Best Of 1986-1989

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Blue Skies & Free-Rides: The Best Of 1986-1989 album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 20   Total Length: 64:23

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Sort it out emusic!

athletecured

You sell yourself as the place to get non-mainstream music, and then seemingly palm-off re-records and out-takes without proper attribution. We want to be legit, you know – but sometimes you make it difficult!

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Almost Prayed

McrIsRed

Great tune, well worth downloading.

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ALmost great...

eMonkey

Aaaargh!!! Excitement at seeing one of my favorite indie bands of the eighties turned to disappointment when I realized that a number of these tracks are demo tracks/ outtakes. It's always nice to have these to complete a collection if you can get the original versions elsewhere, but sadly this is not the case here. I'm really hoping we can get the excellent Mayflower soon on eMusic as these version in comparison (especially Naked As The Day You Were Born and She Comes From The Rain) just don't cut it...

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They Say All Music Guide

The Weather Prophets were one of the least heralded bands to record for Creation in the ’80s, maybe because they jumped to the short-lived Creation-fed/Warner Bros.-financed Elevation imprint, or maybe because they didn’t overflow with flash like the Primals or mess with heads like My Bloody Valentine. They just played their straightforward indie pop songs with a minimum of fuss and left the scene, doomed to be forgotten and undervalued. Chief songwriter/vocalist Pete Astor wrote and played at a level just below Lloyd Cole and Edwyn Collins, the band was proficient but not inventive, and they had a few hits but no smashes — just the kind of band that is due for a second look through the rose-colored microscope of nostalgia. Blue Skies & Free Rides: The Best of 1986-1989 is a 20-track collection of their finest singles and album tracks that gives indie poppers a chance to do some rediscovery. In 2004 the tunes sound fresh and uncluttered. The best of the bunch, like “Almost Prayed,” “Always the Light,” “You’re My Ambulance,” “In My Room,” and “Your Heartbeat Breathes the Life into Me,” are simple songs with a big heart and a clever knack for turning a phrase. Astor has a wonderfully conversational voice, occasionally capable of breaking your heart, as on the acoustic “She Comes from the Rain.” If you missed out on them the first time, you should take a chance on them. If you like smart, hooky guitar pop, you won’t be disappointed. If you were there at the time and have forgotten just how good the Weather Prophets were, shame on you. As penance, you need to get this disc and remember. Thank Cherry Red for giving you the chance at redemption. – Tim Sendra

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