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Fortune's Favour
Fortune's Favour

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Artist: Great Big Sea
Label: SUMA RECORDS
Category: Music

List Price: $13.99
Buy New: $8.59
You Save: $5.40 (39%)



New (34) Used (11) from $7.00

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 8 reviews
Sales Rank: 981

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 2
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

MPN: 1
UPC: 634457401129
EAN: 0634457401129
ASIN: B0019ESNEG

Release Date: July 8, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: NEW & FACTORY SEALED DIGIPAK CD. International shipping available. Ships First Class and Expedited.

Tracks:

  • Love Me Tonight
  • Walk On The Moon
  • England
  • Here And Now
  • Long Lost Love
  • Oh Yeah
  • Banks Of Newfoundland
  • Dream To Live
  • Company Of Fools
  • Hard Case
  • Rocks Of Marasheen
  • Dance Dance
  • Heart Of Stone
  • Straight To Hell

Similar Items:

  • What's the Rumpus?
  • Courage & Patience & Grit - Great Big Sea In Concert [CD/DVD Combo]
  • Viva La Vida
  • The Hard & The Easy
  • Rant and Roar

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
After a remarkable 15 years in, a band should by this time be content to slow down and rest on their laurels. Instead, ''Fortune's Favour'' sees Great Big Sea boldly embracing new sounds and new ideas, fearlessly pushing the boundaries of their own art and music. In their lifelong quest to marry the traditional music of Newfoundland with their own pop explorations, ''Fortune's Favour'' is a new benchmark.

14 new tracks plus a bonus DVD of the group in the recording studio.



Customer Reviews:   Read 3 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars A celebration of life through music   July 8, 2008
 10 out of 10 found this review helpful

Here's something that should not only please long-time fans of Great Big Sea, but it just might win over a few newcomers. I've always felt the band's greatest strength was the ability to combine the traditional songs of their homeland of Newfoundland with modern pop/rock sensibilities. And FORTUNE'S FAVOUR fulfills that ambition flawlessly. Not since 1995's Up have I enjoyed a Great Big Sea album so completely.

Here's a breakdown of the tracks:

--LOVE ME TONIGHT & WALK ON THE MOON: Two near-perfect pop numbers that set the mood for an album's worth of life-affirming melodies

--ENGLAND finds Sean McCann in fine form in a traditional-sounding story song about finding one's fortune in Newfoundland

--HERE AND NOW is an up-tempo rocker in the same vein as "When I'm Up" and "Shines Right Through." Alan Doyle drives home his live-for-today philosophy with some evocative vocals

--LONG LOST LOVE: Sean McCann channels a reggae vibe for a fun, funny tune about pining for a lost love. This song has one of the album's best verses, as the singer talks of buying his intended a limousine: "But when you get out on the highway/Life is seldom as it seems/When the car breaks down/You'd start blaming me."

--OH YEAH: Alan Doyle's long-held aspiration of being a rock star come at you full-speed in this surprising song that's bound to sound fantastic in concert.

--DREAM TO LIVE: My favorite track at the moment. McCann again, telling another travelling song, over a driving beat. The chorus simply soars

--COMPANY OF FOOLS is Doyle again, playing around. Not my favorite song, but it's amusing and full of life

--HARD CASE and HEART OF STONE: Two more pop numbers which are growing on me. The latter features vocal assistance from the talented Jeen O'Brien

--DANCE DANCE is a classic Doyle theme: Trying to get the girl. "Before the band is done/Before your Daddy comes." A cute uptempo number

--STRAIGHT TO HELL is sure to be a concert highlight. It's a testament to Alan Doyle's songwriting skills that he can transplant the legendary Robert Johnson "crossroads" blues mythology and apply it to folk singers from Newfoundland. But it works, and it's a great way for the album to go out with a bang

What may not come through in reading those brief track descriptions is the often-brilliant musicianship of FORTUNE'S FAVOUR. The guys have literally never sounded better. The whole disc flows beautifully. And for those who prefer traditional songs to the pop stuff, no less than 4 songs on the disc feature references to the band's homeland. And although you may think you're hearing song traditional material, the band wrote every one of the tracks on the album.

And it's that last reason, more than anything else, that makes FORTUNE'S FAVOUR a classic. After 15 years of adapting traditional music to their own style, Great Big Sea is now making their OWN traditional music for future generations to enjoy.

Highly recommended.





5 out of 5 stars Great Album From a Great Band   July 2, 2008
 3 out of 7 found this review helpful

Fortune's Favor is the latest in a long line of great albums by the Great Big Sea...a definite must have!


2 out of 5 stars A tough act to follow   August 9, 2008
 3 out of 4 found this review helpful

I guess in this world of constant evolution from recording artists worth their salt it's no wonder that GBS opt for a transformation to pop music. Only, this isn't their first venture. After a few mediocre trips into popdom with "Sea Of No Cares" and "Something Beautiful" which were passable at best, GBS returned to what they do best on "The Hard And The Easy." The fantastic vintage of that record washed away the heartfelt homogeny that it's predecessors brought in. That being said, I relished the release of "Fortune's Favour", and even moreso that it was produced by wunderkind, Hawksley Workman! How can you lose with GBS and Hawksley Workman? "Fortune's Favour" is how. The opening song "Love Me Tonight" runs the safe, tried and true lines of a typical pop love song with an almost adult contemporary-type production. The traditional instruments are almost absent from this and it's follow-up, the first single, "Walk On The Moon." This is yet another sad attempt by Alan Doyle to bring optimism forth only to have it be another case of 4 minute banality. Sean McCann's vocal arrival at track three with "England," proves that music doesn't have to be important to be important. This, if it isn't a traditional (there are no songwriting credits on the album anywhere), certainly sings like one and is the highlight of the whole disc. Sadly, even "England" could not save this album as what follows from track 4-14 is nothing but one bit of overproduced pop nonsense all run together. I suppose all is not lost, "Company of Fools" is a small bit of fun, and I suppose that if you are looking for something a bit more current in your listening material this might be up your alley. Speaking as a listener well versed in the best GBS has done in the past and could do.... This is certainly not the best they could do and is a limp follow-up to "The Hard And The Easy."


3 out of 5 stars A Break from Tradition   July 18, 2008
 2 out of 3 found this review helpful

After listening to the samples on amazon I was not holding up high hopes for Great Big Sea's latest album. It already struck me as sounding over-produced and not as organic as most of the GBS albums. Being a loyal GBS fan I bought Fortune's Favour and have been dutifully listening to it and I've noticed some important things. This album is a BIG mix of styles. There are tracks that sounds like 90s rock, some more like modern country, and some more traditional songs. There are a lot of tight harmonies, but the drum set and the grab bag of auxiliary instruments is distracting. Either way, I'd like to say that there is something for everyone on this CD, except for the person who is looking for the Celtic, free-spirited traditional music that these Newfoundlanders are famous for.

To its credit, the album is growing on me and it does come with a dvd. That said, I don't expect to hear a lot of these songs when I see them in concert this September. It doesn't have the kitchen party feel. And speaking of which, if you're looking for your first Great Big Sea CD I'd start with Rant and Roar or Hard and the Easy. This album gets a fair three stars, but it's painful for me because if I could rate the band on the whole it would still get all five.



5 out of 5 stars Back in great form   July 28, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Fortune's Favour is the first "pop" oriented album from Great Big Sea since 'Something Beautiful' in 2004 and I personally think it is even better. Four years of focusing on traditional music has done nothing to dampen the pop sensibilities of the band. 'Walk on the Moon' can be a radio hit in the US if there are stations brave enough to try something outside the typical offering. All of the songs are typical of the GBS philosophy, life is good and you better take advantage of life now. So buy the album, see them in a concert venue near you when they tour in the Fall, and get moving and live because you can't hold still when GBS is part of the soundtrack of your life.

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