A.C. Weir - This Has Been Me Since Yesterday (CD)

SKU: CDTRAX399

Price:
$ 15.99

Description

A lifetime of songs distilled into one album by a remarkable songwriter.

Glaswegian A.C. (Alex) Weir releases his debut album at 77 years of age!The music business has been transformed in the last couple of decades, but one of the plus points of the new digital landscape must surely be that technology makes it possible now for a man of 77, who had only previously performed at family gatherings, to release his debut album.All the songs on 'This has been me since yesterday' were written by Alex Weir, a Glaswegian who in his spare time, accumulated a significant body of work over the years. Original versions of his songs were recorded on an old 'reel to reel' tape recorder at various points from the mid-60s to the early 90s, but were never designed for public consumption. The decision to re-create them in a modern studio setting was taken after a conversation between Alex and his two sons in the autumn of 2016; the subsequent recording sessions took place over the next nine months whenever, time, health and finances allowed. The Weir boys called in a number of musical contacts to flesh out the material and bring the professional sheen which is evident throughout the album. Their Dad's original demos have a charm of their own, but the re-recorded versions take the songs to a new level. It has taken a long time, but Weir's songs have finally been given the platform they always deserved.The title of the album is a phrase (once quoted in a sketch by Billy Connolly) that is common among Glaswegians of a certain age. It would generally be used by two people meeting on the street, each comparing notes on how busy they have been. 'This has been me since yesterday' might be encountered with 'Aye, I've not sat down since I got up.' Standout tracks include 'Aberfan' (written in the immediate aftermath of the Welsh mining disaster in 1966); 'My Ship Is Sailing Tomorrow' (a powerful ballad about a man wrongfully imprisoned for a crime he did not commit); and 'Going Back To Georgia' (a beautifully melancholic piece featuring some stunning mandolin and pedal steel guitar from Danny Mitchell, who co-wrote Midge Ure's 1986 number 1 smash-hit 'If I Was'). 'Ah Wis Like That' (another choice Glaswegian phrase, explores the comical antics of a chancer in search of sexual adventure), while other tracks, such as 'Hiroshima' and 'Velvet Path To Glory', feature an anti-war theme. The standout track, though, could be the epic 'Thoughts From a Trench' (narrated by a young soldier waiting for instructions to go into battle and meet his almost certain doom). For a man of 77, Weir delivers stunning and passionate vocals which, as it reaches the last emotive line: 'God help me... I don't want to die', will leave not a dry eye in the house.

The one exception in this collection is the last track, 'Walk a Mile In These Shoes'. It was felt by the Weir boys that it would be nice to include one of their Dad's original recordings and, apart from a little bit of tweaking and hiss management, the piece is retained, raw and unadorned.

Track Listing

    • Aberfan
    • Who Wrote the 12 Bar Blues
    • THe Velvet Path of Glory
    • Thouhts From a Trench
    • Going Back To Georgie
    • My Ship is Sailing Tomorrow
    • Back To The South
    • Hiroshima
    • Louisiana Lad
    • A Wis Like THat
    • People Cannot Choose
    • Walk a Mile in His Shoes

    Additional Details

    Label: Greentrax

    Genre: Folk

    Language: English

    Run Time: 60 mins

    Region: 0

    Release Date: 11/09/18

    UPC: 5018081039920

    Payment & Security

    American Express Apple Pay Diners Club Discover Meta Pay Google Pay Mastercard PayPal Shop Pay Venmo Visa

    Your payment information is processed securely. We do not store credit card details nor have access to your credit card information.

    You may also like

    Recently viewed