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CD album |
Friendly Skies |
2008 |
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Hugh's release notes |
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Text in this rather fetching blue-green is by Hugh.
Propos:
It was 1960, and I was nine, an age when all one really wants to believe is the unbelievable. I chanced to read, in a schoolboy annual, the abridged memoirs of a World War II fighter pilot. I particularly remember the way his account ended, in the first mad euphoria of peacetime, with himself and a friend taking their planes, strictly against standing orders, up for a jaunt. Despite having fought aerial battles flooded with adrenalin, for once they were able to simply enjoy the ecstasy of flight as they rolled and looped in those friendly skies like otters in a pool, unthreatened and free.
Several years later, Bob Dylan was to memorably ask: “Are birds free from the chains of the sky?” My childhood vision clarified into a new realization. All freedoms are subject to gravity. All liberties are freighted with obligations. Thus, in the same way that my 1995 album Negotiations and Lovesongs explored the tension between fidelity and integrity, so this one explores the dynamic that must exist between commitment and freedom ... music for grownups? Maybe.
Hugh Featherstone, August 2006.
Production:
That two of these songs have already appeared on Live at the Chapel is probably due to a fault in the space-time continuum, for which I advise the red pill. The versions here are in fact the originals. The basic tracks were laid down at the “Tone Zone”, Hauset, Belgium, in the autumn of 2003, with additional recording and all engineering, mixing etc. at “while-others-sleep” Göttingen, Germany between April 2004 and April 2006.
Produced for blutopia.networks and DTMCI by Frank-Stefan Kimmel at while-others-sleep.de.
“Friendly Skies” reaches your ears courtesy of Brauner microphones, Millennia pre-amps, Furukawa cables and Pauler Acoustics mastering tools.
The ideal way to enjoy this album is through a truly fine sound system (with all the irritating gizmos and filters switched “off”), while curled up round a mug of cocoa in your favourite sofa or “comfy Eames chair” after a long walk in the rain. A compressed, frequency-mutilated MP3 through a pair of cereal boxes or plastic bottle tops will never equal the real thing, but feel free to try.
Personnel:
Drums and percussion – Christian Archontidis
Bass – Grischka Zepf
Occasional keyboards and synth-bass – FSK
String arrangement on “The Kennedys” – Hans Kaul
(violins – Henning Vater, viola – Franziska Buttkus, cello – Lucile Chaubard)
Harmony vocals – Kim Bastian, Julia Hansen, FSK and HF
Lead vocals, all acoustic and electric guitars and various subliminal stuff – HF.
Packaging:
All sleeve art, 3-D modelling and layout by PhilBY at nemodreaming.com
Booklet photos by David John Ursa Major Design
Publishing:
Copyright in all songs, words and music: Hugh Featherstone and DTMCI. For more background, go to hughfeatherstone.com and turn left at the pub.
Patrons: thanks to the Colonerus brothers at DTMCI for enabling us to finish this project. Thanks to David for services above and beyond. Thanks to the divine Miss Hansen for bringing her skills to The old frontier and When the Kennedys ride again. Thanks to Walter Kraushaar for creating the Stageplayer “Hugh Featherstone” acoustic 6-string and Stageplayer “HF Custom II” acoustic/electric baritone guitars. Thanks to Tom Launhardt and Karsten Kobs for building a masterpiece I am proud to own and hope one day to be worthy of. Thanks to all the musicians who worked on this album and to “A Panel of Experts” who will have the task of bringing it alive on stage. Respect to Uli, Steve, Kai, Rollo, Big Murph and the Hammer Brothers for the trucks. Thanks, as always, to FSK for sound advice, good company and great cappuccino. |
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Friendly Skies front cover designed by nemodreaming.com |
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Friendly Skies front cover (detail) |
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nemodreaming's collage depicts a fantastic cosmography with the Earth surrounded by a paper moon, cotton wool clouds, gold foil stars, a tin-can spaceship, a hand-drawn asteroid and two mysterious spirals. The background firmament has the colour and texture of aged parchment or handmade paper.
The Earth itself also appears to be made of brown paper or felt, built up in layers and resembling both an egg-box compartment and a stylized volcano crater seen from above. Nestled in the crater's hollow a foetus wound in a spiral umbilical chord floats in a golden pool. The end of the umbilical chord is connected to mother earth.
This fresh, naive work is reminscent on one hand of a child's drawing and on the other of ancient cosmographies replete with symbolic portent. Who or what is this golden child waiting to be born, and what could it mean for our planet?
While this cosmic collage does not directly illustrate any of the songs on this album, it reflects in a delightful way the belief in renaissance and renewal of civilization which underlies much of Hugh's music and poetry. |
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Friendly Skies |
Review |
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Waiting for friendly skies
A pre-release review of Hugh Featherstone's solo album Friendly Skies
by David John for My Favourite Planet |
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Hook, line and solo |
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One night a songwriter wakes up with a new song in his head. The song calls to him so urgently that he is forced out of bed to find paper and pen. With the dawn, he finds the scrawled results of his nocturnal labours. So it wasn't just a dream then. As he reads, he realizes that this isn't half bad and reaches for his guitar to try out the chords.
Later, in the rehearsal studio, he plays the new song to his fellow musicians. "You know," says the drummer, "that isn't half bad." "Let's do it," says the bassist. And they do it. It seems to go down well at the next couple of gigs, and the lighting guy says his sister says it's her favourite and wants to know if she can get it on Napster.
Not all songs come that easy. Many have a long and painful birth, conceived on hard and humbling lessons. But the muses decide to smile on our scribe, and at last he has enough songs, the right crew of musicians and the financial wherewithal to get into a recording studio.
Each stage of the production, from first takes, through mixing to mastering, demands tough decisions: what to leave in, what to cut out; what to tweak and what to leave well alone; where is the balance and what is the order?
Somehow the album is finally finished. And despite the inevitable compromises, the wee gems that got lost in the cut, the backing singer's flu, our songwriter is quite justifiably proud of the final product. Look: even the cover design shimmers delightfully before your eyes.
Now all he has to do is pray that enough people buy it. How many lighting guys' sisters are out there anyhow?
To get people to listen to a whole album, there has to be at least one song with something which bridges their attention span, hits a nerve and releases either the endorphins or the paper hankies. It could be a hook, a line, a nifty guitar solo or a crafty chorus. And will they want to keep hearing it? Is it catchy enough to go straight to their heart like a velvet bullet, and stay there? As Carol King once wrote: "Tonight you're mine completely... But will you still love me tomorrow?" |
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Dante goes to Düsseldorf |
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Hugh Featherstone's new album Friendly Skies has more than a couple of catchy numbers, at least two of which are deeply moving. Which of the 13 songs will become your favourite is up to you, but I've already decided on mine.
Once again the Belgian-based bard presents us with a collection of songs which are strung loosely on a theme. In his sleeve notes he writes:
"All freedoms are subject to gravity. All liberties are freighted with obligations. Thus, in the same way that my 1995 album Negotiations and Lovesongs explored the tension between fidelity and integrity, so this one explores the dynamic that must exist between commitment and freedom."
If that sounds serious, it is, and most of the songs deal with the serious business of loss: lost love, lost opportunities, lost horizons. Like a modern day Dante, Featherstone reports from beyond the gates of the purgatory into which his protagonists have been cast. But nowhere does he abandon hope. In When the Kennedys ride again, a song which explores the dreams kindled by the social and political changes of the early 1960s, the promise of a shining future still awaits us, if we are brave enough to reach out for it.
But we're on a curve, my friend It'll work out in the end There'll be courageous decisions There'll be no more divisions They'll be dancing in the Plaza rain |
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Watch me shoot myself in the foot |
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And not all is doom and gloom in the Friendly Skies universe. The tragi-comic Slo-mo comprises the confessions - both tongue-in-cheek and foot-in-mouth - of someone who always unwittingly sabotages his own chances of happiness. A 21st century Jerry Lewis. I mean, you just have to laugh, don't you?
I trip right over my shoes in confusion Mistake a dream for the news, my delusion When opportunity knocks I fall right out of my socks and slip sideways and twisting and turning, diving into blue
This force of attraction that fuzzes up my view When all that I needed and all I had to do Was love you |
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Where the medium is the message |
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As is the case in many Featherstone songs, love is the solution, the salvation, or as he puts it in Love is a stranger here:
Love is the revelator Love, the illuminator
A pretty big claim for such a small word. But watch out, this is the force which holds atoms together, keeps the universe spinning and can lift us out of the hell we've let ourselves fall into. This is the card that gets you out of jail. More than just a romantic notion, this is Hugh's credo, and this song could well be a manifesto. In a world far below the press of dense grey clouds we are fed on a diet of baubles, TV commercials and junk headlines. But how to lift ourselves above the dross, beyond the clouds, into that wide blue yonder - aloft among friendly skies? Listen to this song and find out.
Love is a stranger here is the strongest song Hugh has put on disc for some time, perhaps his finest yet, and without a doubt the best song I have heard anywhere for years. And let me assure you, it has some pretty tough competition.
Despite its negative-sounding title, the general thrust is upwards. Like it's subject, the whole song seems to lift up and soar into clear space. Quite a feat, achieved largely by the structure of the lyrics and musical arrangement as well as Hugh's sensitive vocal delivery. The fine poetic language provides the feathers to the wings of Featherstone's voice as it glides effortlessly above the light mesh of instrumentation.
I first heard Hugh perform Love is a stranger here at one of his solo concerts and was immediately smitten by it. Having waited impatiently to hear it again, I have to admit preferring the guitar-only version. A version with an open string/keyboard accompaniment should help the song fly even higher. However, while listening on a medium-fi system, I found the drumming too busy and intrusive in some places, which almost distracted this Icarus from his aerial navigation and threatened to topple him out of heaven.
This is presumably one reason why the album's sleeve notes advise us to listen "through a truly fine sound system (with all the irritating gizmos and filters switched "off")". Quite right too. |
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Calling me, calling you |
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Everywhere else on this album the drumming and percussion are spot on, most especially on Calling home where it's just perfick. A pacey, uplifting number in which the instantaneousness of modern international communications serves as a metaphor for world unity. I'm not sure how the Martians got in there, but a lot of people like Martians, so why not?
The backing vocals have a small but vital role on this track, and have surprised me into delighted laughter every time they first appear. The contributions of harmony singers Kim Bastian and Julia Hansen are a joy throughout; Kim Bastian having the lighter ethereal voice, while Ms Hanson's has a delicate trace of sensuality. On The old frontier the latter reminds me of the young Cleo Laine.
The old frontier is a wierdly warped science fiction yarn. A tattered temponaut returns from a failed mission to change history and is greeted by his controller(s) in a way which makes me think of a spider welcoming a fly. The chorus "Rely on us; we're on your side" sounds like a slogan for a corporation you wouldn't want to mess with. Pretty spooky. |
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Introducing the slightly distorted guitar |
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Sidecar, meanwhile, is a driving instrumental with a hard-edged rhythmic heart and gloriously fuzzy edges (provided by Hugh's distorted Stratocaster guitar), and one of the stand-out tracks of this album.
This should be the theme tune for an offbeat TV series about an unlucky-in-love but sharp-as-Occam's-razor detective. The opening sequence would show the searchlight headlamps of the justice-hungry hero's car piercing a murky metropolitan fog. Suggested locations: Istanbul, San Fransisco, Saint Petersburg, Shangai, Budapest. (Send me a ticket and I'll start scouting locations right away.) On the other hand, you could just pack a picnic in the trunk and listen to this as you glide through a summer afternoon. Either way, a fine piece with incisive drumming by Christian Archontidis, Grischka Zepf's voluptuous bass and some deeply satisfying acoustic and electric guitar by Hugh.
Variously distorted guitar sounds feature frequently on this collection. It's like it's something Hugh has always wanted to do, and only now feels free enough to let rip. About time. This is what the man confided to this reporter:
"The distorted but very linear guitars on Sidecar are a doff of the cap to Rick Derringer whose trademark role with Steely Dan it was to provide such occasional nifty parallel riffs. All the electric guitar work on the album was done with my Stratocaster over a Petersburg 100 tube amp which we then compressed either a little, just enough to get it crunchy (Getting going, getting gone), or a hell of a lot to get it to sound like funky toothpaste (Sidecar, Slo-mo), only opening up the top end for a bit more gloss and expense (When the Kennedys ride again)."
So now you know. But don't tell anybody I told you. It's no secret though that Hugh is a great admirer of Steely Dan's slim but substantial body of work, and When the Kennedys ride again shares the same kind of wry nostalgia for aspects of 1960s culture which obsess Donald Fagan, especially the futuristic visions which were then the stuff of boyhood dreams. But where Fagan seems to bathe innocently in these dreams, Hugh can't resist lifting up the brightly painted stones to show what dark forms crawl beneath. Not for the squeamish. |
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Of refugees and aural architects |
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The overall technical excellence of this album is due in no small part to the talents of producer Frank Stefan Kimmel, who shares with Hugh a keen ear and painstaking attention to detail. Having worked with Hugh on several productions now, he has also acquired a deeper understanding of his work and expectations. Watching the two work together at La Chapelle studios last year, it was evident that they can achieve maximum results with minimum fuss. Hand in glove. Like an aural architect, Kimmel creates sonic worlds and spaces that are worth listening to very, very carefully.
Refugees are not excluded from this album's asylum. A new citizen has become so comfortable in his adoptive land that he forgets he was once himself a refugee. He joins his voice to those who would draw the ladder up after them and bar the gates of their paradise to other supplicants. When he meets the Man who wasn't there, he sees a mirror which confronts him with his own hypocrisy. As ever Hugh Featherstone is willing to evince sympathy for someone whose erroneous attitudes are born of ignorance or a lack of imagination. The song also brings a new twist to an old tale with his adaptation of a witty nonsense rhyme by the legendary and prolific author A. Nonymous.
Yesterday upon the stair You met a man who wasn't there He wasn't there again today You wish that he would go away
man who wasn't there takes it place in the canon of Hugh Featherstone's hymns to social consciousness, along with Union Dan, Solid state, The hiring man, Statistic, Candlelight and others. Some of them continue the traditions of the protest song. They do not address the powerful, who for the most part have immured themselves from such fleabites, but certainly are a wake up call for us down here to take responsibility for our planet and each other. This also puts this song thematically at the heart of this album, even though it's not that easy to sing along to, except for the lines "Longing to be, longing to be, Longing to belong", which are quite catchy. However, You would definitely feel a proper Charlie if you found yourself repeating that on the bus. |
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The bridge of skies |
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A few songs on Friendly Skies would fit stylistically well on Hugh's previous albums, and seem to cover older Featherstone territory, especially as they have taken a while to reach the light of a CD laser head. Indeed, this CD has been three years in the making. In the meantime, he has completely let loose with his songwriting to produce completely unexpected and often outrageous numbers like No regrets, Boxcar City, Blue-sky science and Moving to Berlin. These appeared on his 2005 album Live at the Chapel, somewhat upsetting the temporal balance of things (maybe we could send some temponauts off to fix this little problem). Whether they herald a whole new direction in his creative development or just a short detour, time and future recordings will tell.
For now though, this album could be seen as a bridge between lyrical latitudes. When you come to it, the strength and grace of its architecture, the fine curve of its arches and the brilliant glow of its illuminations make it well worth crossing.
David John
www.my-favourite-planet.de |
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1 Kite / Calling home
2 The same in blue
3 Wine bar bombers
4 I guess I was wrong
5 Love is a stranger here
6 Getting going, getting gone
7 Sidecar
8 The old frontier
9 A corner of the sky
10 Man who wasn't there
11 Slo-mo
12 When the kennedys ride again
13 The complex art
All songs by Hugh Featherstone |
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Friendly Skies |
lyrics and notes |
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All Hugh's CD album sleeves contain lyrics and notes, so the best way to enjoy them is to read as you listen. But for those of you who can't wait, here they are.
All text in this rather fetching blue-green by Hugh Featherstone. |
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Friendly Skies |
Kite / Calling home |
track 1 |
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Kite
Written late in the production as an introduction to Calling home.
I see that the 1930s custom of writing slow intros for up-tempo tunes seems to be staging a modest comeback. Does this make me cutting edge?
Sometimes I lie awake at night & watch the stars turn round But I know which one is yours all right It’s already homeward bound
& I don’t need a navigation light As your fingers start to twine ‘cause you wind me like a paper kite Once you get me on your line
Calling home
This little number about aliens tapping our cell-phones linked Rangoon
and Oslo even before the Nobel committee did. From “calling Rio”, it turned into a roster of cities, which we later cut. Sorry if yours got edited.
Calling Rio, calling Rome Calling London, calling home From New York City to Amsterdam It’s one nation. It's one land Calling DC from Taipei & Mogadishu from LA
Don’t need to pack your bags to travel there Don’t need a visa or a plane Before you've even left you’re right back home again
Calling Tokyo from Saigon We’ve got the whole world logging on Calling Memphis from Kathmandu Don’t call Elvis till he calls you
Don’t need to pack your bags to travel Don’t need a ticket for a train We’ll beam you anywhere you want & back again
Calling Oslo from Rangoon They’re all humming that freedom tune Calling Moscow from the moon There’ll be Martians calling soon |
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Friendly Skies |
The same in blue |
track 2 |
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Out of an innocent question: “Do you have the same in blue?”
grew a song about dealing with grief. Friends may avoid you because they can’t handle another’s pain, yet you’re still the same person … the blue version.
They tell me that you've lost someone special They tell me that you really got hurt Well, everybody goes through that sometime You wake up with your face in the dirt
& turn to look around you From this novel point of view The ground came up to bruise you But life goes on as usual It’s just the same, in blue
You know you got a lot left to live for You know you got a future out there You know that there'll be friends you can count on You know that there'll be moments to share
It’s time to turn the corner Come back & join the crew Walk that extra mile Flash that winning smile You’re just the same, in blue
Maybe all you need is some medicine That won't make you feel worse Maybe all you need is a doctor Just like I need a nurse
I'm not so very different, & I've been down there too Yes, I'm another one, but I refused to run I'm just the same, in blue No, I'm not really different, & I could be good for you
Catch you when you fall, be the one you call I'm just the same, in blue Try me on for size, you know I match your eyes I’m just the same, in blue |
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Friendly Skies |
Wine bar bombers |
track 3 |
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Sandro and Carmen are middle-class kids trying to live a normal life in a nightmare of civil implosion, deeply in denial for the mess their class of people have got the country into. The only thing worth dying for is life.
Hugh made a video of this song for his YouTube channel in 2011, when he wrote:
This song grew out of events in Columbia in the early years of the new century. Carmen and Sandro, two middle class kids, find it hard to accept that they carry any share of the blame for what is happening to their country. But in reality, even drug wars are class wars at the root. The disenfranchised will always find a way to secure some kind of franchise after all!
There are urban guerrillas among us Another agenda from work and sleep and play And a little church They’re immunized against reason Reason it was that stole their land away
Left them in the lurch Now they've moved into town Go driving around in their stolen cars Leaving parcels for narks and real-estate sharks In wine bars
They set off a bomb in the main square If this is the face of peace, I preferred the war At least you knew where it was Somewhere out in the jungle hills
Somewhere out in the shacks and the coffee fields They were angry with us Now they've moved into town Go sneaking around in their denim suits With their Maoist ideas and their Internet fears
And their cheap cheroots
I'm too cool for this (do I have to care?) I'm too cool for this (and I don’t want to die) I'm too cool for this (do I have to care?) I'm too cool for this, go take your slogans elsewhere
Borrow a scooter from Niño Carmen and me are going to head for Ecuador Live on the beach She's going to drop out of law school Won't be a poster child for their dirty war
Stay out of kidnapping reach We'll camp far from town Watch the sun going down over Pasado With the waves crashing round While her light skin turns brown as an Indio
The only thing worth dying for The only thing worth dying for The only thing worth dying for is life |
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Friendly Skies |
I guess I was wrong |
track 4 |
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Recorded late on a rainy night with the big rigs rumbling over the border just outside our studio door, this very simple downer
about hearts in transit was nearly scrapped before Christian and Grischka came along to rescue it.
It's not intentional; no one's to blame Accidents happen all the same No one's accountable; it's not your fault If love hit a side road & ground to a halt
I guess I believed that what we had was strong A thing with a future, well, I guess I was wrong
It's not a tragedy, nobody died Nobody cheated on anyone & nobody lied It’s not dramatic; I shouldn't make a big deal But I can't help feeling the things you don't feel
I guess I reckoned that where we belong Is in each other's arms, well, I guess I was wrong
It's not unusual I know it happens each day Someone picks up the phone to hear love slip away
No one's responsible, the buck stops nowhere But there's a dent in the pillow now that smells of your hair Nothing’s been broken here, if you don't count my heart
But try as I might, I can't get it to start I guess I was dreaming my life in a song In which somebody loved me Well I guess I was wrong There I was dreaming my life in a song
In which somebody loved me Well, I guess I was wrong |
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Friendly Skies |
Love is a stranger here |
track 5 |
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Almost everyone is ready to believe that their dreams would be easier to realize elsewhere. Yet the things
we really need to change tend to travel with us wherever we go. I’d like to patent this chord sequence.
Where the medium is the message Surplus, surface, the glitter's never gold Where the tedium fills the front page Oblation, sensation, the bitter & the bold
Love is the infiltrator Love is the instigator But love is a stranger here
Where the advertisers haunt you It’s out there, somewhere, calling out your name Where the game show prizes taunt you To reach you, teach you, you'll never be the same
Love, the communicator Love is your respirator But love is a stranger here
Time trickles through your fingers A heart sleeping while you linger here
So, you take a plane one morning A one way motion, never to return Below, familiar skyline dawning A runway emotion, you smile & watch it burn Love is the revelator
Love, the illuminator But love was a stranger here Love, the communicator Love is the infiltrator But love is a stranger here |
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Friendly Skies |
Getting going, getting gone |
track 6 |
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Written 2000
A live version of this song appears on Hugh's 2005 CD Live at the Chapel.
This is one of those songs that I can easily imagine being done much better by someone else: in this case, a deeply FM, West-coast style of production, with Steve Tyler's voice.
We had a good love, had something strong But now it's faded, it all feels wrong When I look into the past I see it bathed in light But when I look into the future it's as black as night
I'm getting going, I'm getting gone
I reach to hold you, can't hold you long It's like you freeze me, won't keep me warm Lately you just look at me like someone lost
Another burning bridge you have to run across I'm getting going, I'm getting gone
It's like I'm standing alone at a crossroads Not a single sign I know Time for heading off-road Don’t matter where I go
Now I'm running down this dusty by-way
With the sunset in my eyes There's good times coming my way Out of clear and friendly skies
No use in playing your favourite song No use in asking what track I'm on Now the only thing in common is the colour blue And it always was impossible to talk to you
I'm getting going, I'm getting gone Now the only thing in common is the colour blue And it always was impossible to talk to you I'm getting going, I'm getting gone,
I'm getting gone I'm getting going ... ... I'm getting gone |
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Friendly Skies |
Sidecar |
track 7 |
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guitar instrumental
I still miss the ritual of turning over a vinyl record: the hiss at the end of the last track, the clonk of the arm disengaging. Get up, turn it over, wipe it, replace the arm, hiss, crackle . music. This is intended to bring a touch of A/B to CD. The title refers to an interview with Jimi Hendrix, in which he described himself, an overgrown kid in grade school, feeling like the doomed gunner in a Wehrmacht motorcycle-sidecar combination, his long legs cramped under the arch of a tiny desk beneath his teacher's basilisk stare. |
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Friendly Skies |
The old frontier |
track 8 |
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Inspired by Terry Gilliam’s brilliant Army of Twelve Monkeys.
A multitude of possible futures may mean a multitude of possible pasts. So which one do you change when trying to engineer the present?
Welcome back to the 21st Century To the old frontier Yes, of course we kept your hard-disc Plug in over here, over here
Welcome back to the 21st Century On a normal day Meet the New Team, been a few changes Since you went away
Welcome back to the 21st Century (Would you repeat that please?) You’d better share with Winston and the Rainman They’ve got the same disease
Rely on us; we’re on your side Rely on us; you must have had a nasty, Must have had a nasty ride
Welcome back to the 21st Century We’ve had to change the codes None of you got Hitler or the Inquisition There were too many roads
Welcome back to the 21st Century Now go and join the queue They ask the same things, have the same problems and they all look like you
Rely on us; we're on your side Rely on us; you must have had a nasty, Must have had a nasty ride |
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Friendly Skies |
A corner of the sky |
track 9 |
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Hugh made a video of this song in 2011 for his YouTube channel, and sang it for the Lokal Heroes 2012 CD To be continued ....
Written just after the euphemistically named "events" of September 11th. Birds fly over the rainbow, clouds cross borders so why do we insist on making life so complicated? Can a simple thing like love still save us, even in this age of global electronic surveillance and the all-powerful, all-devouring idols of commerce and war? And will religion ever become part of the solution instead of consistently being the problem?
Thinking about the day that we first met Thinking about the things I can't forget Thinking about the diamonds in your eyes Thinking about a corner of the sky
Thinking about an old eternal dream Thinking about a love that might have been Thinking how a man's not meant to cry Thinking about a corner of the sky
Thinking about a taste left in my mouth Thinking about the swallows heading south Thinking how these borders are a lie Thinking about a corner of the sky
Thinking about the airwaves full of hate Thinking about the war within our gates Thinking how we sleep while bombers fly Thinking about a corner of the sky
Thinking about the way the earth is round Thinking there's no refuge to be found Thinking about the satellites that pry Into every detail of our lives
Thinking about a cloud that's passing by Headed for your corner of the sky |
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Friendly Skies |
Man who wasn't there |
track 10 |
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My friend Dale is angry about his country’s policy towards asylum seekers.
He says a nation founded by the deported and the destitute should be more generous to people in the same situation today.
On the margins of the world Where the fringes start to curl You till your piece of bitter earth And eat your heart for what it’s worth You’re a refugee
And every night you ride that train Through your personal domain Freighted with your dreams and fears Your mind goes surfing through the years You’re a refugee from an ancient wrong
Longing to be, longing to be Longing to belong
In a brighter, better world Where the flag is now unfurled You build a bigger, fatter life The house, the car, the kids, the wife You were a refugee from an ancient wrong
Now you’ve somewhere, somewhere to be Somewhere to belong
Yesterday upon the stair You met a man who wasn’t there He wasn’t there again today
You wish that he would go away * He’s a refugee. It’s the same old song Longing to be, longing to be, longing to belong Longing to be, longing to be, longing to belonging to be
Longing to be, longing to belong
* freely misquoted from an anonymous “nonsense rhyme” original |
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Friendly Skies |
Slo-mo |
track 11 |
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Written 2002
A live version of this song appears on Hugh's 2005 CD Live at the Chapel.
We are frequently our own heffalumps, tumbling with slapstick predictability into the traps we dig for others. This character is incapable of accepting
good luck at face value, preferring to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory.
Watch me shoot myself in the foot, in slow motion I'd make it worse if I could, this implosion There's no one here to pretend That these are things I can mend
I trip right over my shoes in confusion Mistake a dream for the news, my delusion When opportunity knocks I fall right out of my socks And slip sideways and twisting and turning, diving into blue
This force of attraction that fuzzes up my view When all that I needed and all I had to do Was love you
When someone throws me a line, out of kindness I get completely entwined. It's mindless I flounder out of my depth And tread the water to death And slip sideways, twisting and turning, diving into blue
This force of attraction that fuzzes up my view When all that I needed and all I had to do Was love you
Lo and behold, what do I see below me The mermaids are rising and one seems to know me
You walked right into my heart, Miss-Terious and now it's come to the part where it's serious I'm not equipped for success That's why my life is a mess
I slip sideways and twisting and turning, diving into blue This force of attraction that fuzzes up my view When all that I needed and all I had to do Was love you, was love you, was love you
It's dumb enough; it’s soppy stuff, It's Ike 'n' Tina's puppy love It's cookie time; it's nursery rhyme I could be playing mastermind I'm tossing a coin again; yes I'm tossing a coin again
I'm tossing a coin again; it's going to be tails ...
... Watch me shoot myself in the foot, in slow motion |
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Friendly Skies |
When the Kennedys ride again |
track 12 |
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JFK’s “Camelot” will live as long as the ideal of service fires the imagination
of young Americans. But today’s shredded documents are tomorrow’s confetti, and idealism is losing ground fast in the post-Enron world.
High life, low light It’s what you wanted to be Art Kane, Coltrane And big white spaces between Blue skies, wide eyes Heroes died at the wheel Fast track, the Rat Pack
Moved down to Hollywood to learn how to feel
But we’re on a curve, my friend It’ll work out in the end With a new sense of mission And persistence of vision We’ll be smiling on the news at ten When the Kennedys ride again
Want more on the top floor? Ask what your country can do Payoff or layoff, before they do it to you Lights out, you walk about Things begin to get real Feel numb, you did the sums
Who needs Harvard just to learn how to steal?
But we’re on a curve, my friend It’ll work out in the end There’ll be courageous decisions There’ll be no more divisions They’ll be dancing in the Plaza rain
When the Kennedys ride again
Same suits with new boots Skimmed off all of the cream On the last page of the Space Age hatever happened to Bobby’s dream?
We’ll be nuclear fission We’ll be stars in collision We’ll be everything we were back then With a new sense of mission and persistence of vision
You’ll see us smiling on the news at ten When the Kennedys ride again |
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Friendly Skies |
The complex art |
track 13 |
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Along with certain papers that were left in one of my boxes of lyrics and doodles,
was a sketch for this song about assuming responsibility for one’s emotional errors. Is this really goodbye? I rather think not.
Along with certain papers that were left uptown Some other things went missing and were never found and part of the complex art of sinning Was kidding ourselves that we were winning
and though it was you who fed the flame I’m taking all the blame, 'cause I don't want to hold you; I don't want to hold you I don't want to hold you responsible for this
Among the secret places where we nursed the pain Some were desecrated by a thirst for gain Yet we had hours filled with laughter and dreamed a happy-ever-after
But though we built our house on sand I’ll go ahead as planned, 'cause I don't want to call you; I don't want to call you I don't want to call you names again
‘cause someday I might turn around and ask; where the hell are you? and you'll ask; where the hell am I? and the answer’s clear as an open sky
and that's why, that's why, that's why I don't want to kiss you; I don't want to kiss you I don't want to kiss you goodbye |
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Hugh Featherstone plays Kraushaar Guitars |
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