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The Lilac Time

The Lilac Time

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Album Review

The Lilac Time's self-titled debut is the start of a perfect career. Right off the bat, Stephen Duffy and company mix poetry, pop melodies, and folk instrumentation to create songs of endless charm, mesmerizing passion, and tantalizing atmosphere. Accordions, acoustic guitars, woodwinds, exotic percussion, and Duffy's pensive voice all work toward an uplifting sadness rarely heard this side of Nick Drake. That's not to say that The Lilac Time is a depressing album; how could it be with Duffy's impeccable grasp on a pop chorus and the band's dedication to rolling folk revelries? While much of the album leans toward nature imagery, expressed mostly through metaphor, there's an equal dose of traveling songs to boot. One imagines a vintage 1800s steam train roaring through green pastures and lush vineyards during "Return to Yesterday," an upbeat song that reminisces about England's past and wonders about its future. There's ample bounce as well in "You've Got to Love," "Together," and "Too Sooner Late Than Better." The album makes clear that Duffy had a plan from day one as to the band's distinctive sound. Dark and moody songs like "And the Ship Sails On" and "Love Becomes a Savage" are as fully formed and evocative as similar songs that would appear on the band's late-era masterpiece Looking for a Day in the Night. Drawing favorable and justified comparisons to both the Smiths and Drake is quite an achievement in itself. That the Lilac Time would continue to reach such lofty heights is a testament to the songwriting prowess and subtle musical mastery of Duffy and his band of folk popsters. This fascinating debut is certainly a minimasterpiece, and it's the first step in a remarkable career that would bear additional masterpieces over multiple decades to follow. [The 2006 Fontana edition features nine bonus tracks, including BBC sessions and previously unreleased material.]

Customer Reviews

'Together' is folkin' fantastic.

Played this album over and over back in the day, still return to this album, it was the first album I found in my search for Nick Drake otherness, there's ten to the dozen these days...so it comes as no surprise that the band took it's name from a Nick Drake lyric. Having said that they are their completely their own band. It was an amazing feat and change of direction for Stephen Duffy from his pop chart days to this, it showed his true class as a musician. This has been a tough album to track down for years, got a Japanese import in the end. good to see it here. stand out tracks are 'Black Velvet', 'Love Becomes A Savage' and 'Road To Happiness' But my favourite of the whole album has to be 'Together' such a happy tune, my wife and I used to listen to this in our college days driving through the country on sunny days, it always brought a smile to our faces, it made the future seem bright, it still has that effect today.

Everyone should own this album....

How often is that said? In this case it is true! The Lilac Time are a band that write and perform the most wonderful material - this album is pretty perfect (it bulges with extras not included in the original release and is therefore very good value for money) from a band that you might not get easily signposted to.
"Love becomes a savage" and "Black velvet" are immediate standouts - however delve a little deeper and there are a host of delights. Stephen Duffy is a musical genius and the Lilac Time have always had an adoring fanbase - the music speaks for itself.

Biography

Formed: 1987 in England

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '80s, '90s, '00s

Following a brief solo career under both his own name and the moniker Tin Tin, Stephen Duffy put together the Lilac Time, which traded in his former synth pop excursions for pastoral, folky English pop strongly recalling Skylarking-era XTC. Joined by Mickey Harris, Nick Duffy, and Michael Giri, Duffy crafted several eclectic albums making use of traditional instruments, beginning with a self-titled debut in 1988. 1989's Paradise Circus offered a bit of country & western influence, which was largely...
Full bio

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