Talking With The Taxman About Poetry
$11.48
Free Shipping From $10
Arrives in 4-7 Days.
Standard Shipping
Free (4-7 Days)
Expedited Shipping
$7.95 (2-3 Days)
Express Shipping
$25.99 (1-2 Days)
Standard Shipping
Free (5-8 Days)
Expedited
$7.95 (2-3 Days)
Express
$25.99 (1-2 Days)
✅ This product is in New/Sealed Condition.
Amazon.com Billy Bragg's third full-length album, 1986's Talking with the Taxman About Poetry, is an uncompromised refinement of his brash, anti-Thatcher, busking-bloke persona. Bragg's palette stretches beyond the jagged-rhythmic-guitar-plus-curious-voice approach of the first two albums: "Ideology" and "Marriage" see the addition of horns and piano, "Train Train" adds violin, and singer Kirsty MacColl and guitarist Johnny Marr make guest appearances. The slashing, lovely "Levi Stubbs' Tears," a sad slice-of-life number told from a woman's perspective, showcases the singer-songwriter's ability to write well beyond protest songs. And only Bragg could pen a love song such as "Greetings to the New Brunette" and pull it off. In an off-key yet warm warble, he almost croons, "Shirley, your sexual politics have left me all of a muddle / Shirley, we are joined in the ideological cuddle," one of pop's most delightfully awkward rhymes. And then of course there are the protest songs, such as bracing, simple, Woody Guthrie-ish "There Is Power in a Union." The record's title is taken from a 1926 poem by the poet of the Russian Revolution, Vladimir Mayakovsky. --Mike McGonigalASIN: B000002H40
VSKU: COV.B000002H40.N
Condition: New
Author/Artist:Bragg, Billy
Binding: Audio cd
Shipping
Orders are shipped in 2 business days from our facility in Virginia, ensuring prompt delivery.
Free Shipping From $10!
Free Standard Shipping (4-7 days) on orders over $10 or Free Expedited Shipping on orders over $50.
Returns
Full Refund, Replacement or Store Credit (10% extra) offered for any issues with your order.