The arrangements have flair and drive, giving a listener the opportunity to be swept up in the musical identity of the songs. Field of Crows; Studio album by Fish; Released: 10 December 2003 (mail-order) 25 May 2004 (retail) Recorded: 2003: Genre: Progressive rock: Length: 66:58: Label: Chocolate Frog Records Snapper Music: Producer: Elliot Ness: Professional reviews Field of Crows is his tenth release and is informed by world events, though not overtly.
De facture classique, il se permet malgré tout quelques petits écarts de folie, nettement visibles vers la fin de l’album dans des titres moins formatés comme “Numbers” ou le calme « Exit Wound » et son sax soliste. Field of Crows; Artist Darden Smith; Album After All This Time: The Best of Darden Smith; Licensed to YouTube by [Merlin] IDOL Distribution, WMG … this should not, though, detract from the fact that theman is jewel in the British rock and pop world with a worthy offering fitfor any music fans cd rack.
Field of Crows isanother in a long line of fish albums that may not be appreciated fully bythe popular crowd. Get all the lyrics to songs on Field of Crows and join the Genius community of music scholars to learn the meaning behind the lyrics. « Field Of Crows » me parait être un album prudent.
Heart and conscience empowers his writing and he eschews any sloganeering, allowing his own sociopolitical concerns to take on a human scale. Judging by some of the subject matter, his personal life was still as ruinous and troubled as a Michael Bolton ballad, but broken hearts are the grist to Fish’s peculiar mill and he made heartache fly in songs like the trembling Exit Wound and the down-at-heel … Though there was much to like about 2001’s Fellini Days, Field Of Crows sounded like the work of man who’d just discovered his mojo kicking back in. As mentioned earlier Fish has done better albums, but I enjoy this one a lot as well.
The album closer "Scattering Crows" brings the whole album to a climax and with the sound of a shotgun blast and crows flying up from "The Field".