Product Details
High Land, Hard Rain

High Land, Hard Rain
Aztec Camera

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Track Listing

  1. Oblivious
  2. Boy Wonders
  3. Walk Out to Winter
  4. Bugle Sounds Again
  5. We Could Send Letters
  6. Pillar to Post
  7. Release
  8. Lost Outside the Tunnel
  9. Back on Board
  10. Down the Dip
  11. Haywire
  12. Orchid Girl
  13. Queen's Tattoos

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #93517 in Music
  • Released on: 1991-07-09
  • Number of discs: 1

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
Roddy Frame was slightly ahead of his time. In 1983, when he wrote, arranged, and--with the help of his band, Aztec Camera--recorded High Land, Hard Rain, he was just 19 years old; and Britpop, the genre Aztec Camera in part inspired, wouldn't become popular for another decade. There is certainly more to High Land, Hard Rain than Britpop, however. Frame, a stellar acoustic guitar strummer, fills the 13 songs with jazz chords, and Aztec Camera's grooves foreshadow British jazz popsters the Style Council and Everything But the Girl. Whether making you dance ("Oblivious," "Queen's Tattoos") or reflect ("The Bugle Sounds Again," "We Could Send Letters"), Frame proves a master craftsman. A bonus tip: the sing-songy "Walk Out to Winter" is a fine addition to any holiday mix. --Bill Crandall


Customer Reviews

GREAT!5
This is one of the best pop releases of the early 80's. Great chord structures, melodies, and arrangements - but most of all, songs. I can't believe no one has mentioned my favorite track, "We Could Send Letters" - What a powerful and regal tune. This needs to be in your collection.

Beautiful pop music5
I bought this album (on vinyl, of course) when it was first released and today, 15 years later, own it on CD and it's in my car's CD player. It's beautiful. If you're a fan of Beatles/Crowded House/Squeeze et al. then you will love this tender, noble and oftentimes naive record. Roddy Frame's lyrics and fine guitar playing were never better.

Roddy, Frame It - strong Camera effort!5
With a penchant for word-play that I dare to call Morrissey-esque, Roddy Frame exhibits a maturity beyond his years on this early effort. Vocally, Frame sounds like many of the Brit-indie-rockers of the era (although he hails from Scotland), with his understated, yet emotive style. And Camera creates the fine, melodic landscape for Frame's expression. The music recalls a synth-ier version of the early efforts of their contemporary, Everything But the Girl. Add Morrissey-type lyricism (without the wailing gloom) and you get mature, romantic, poetic music at it's 80's best...