Track Listing 1. Screaming at the Wailing Wall 2. Seven Deadly Sins, The 3. Factory Girls - (with Lucinda Williams) 4. To Youth (My Sweet Roisin Dubh) 5. Whistles the Wind 6. Light of a Fading Star, The 7. Tobacco Island 8. Wrong Company, The 9. Tomorrow Comes a Day Too Soon 10. Queen Anne's Revenge 11. Wanderlust, The 12. Within a Mile of Home 13. Spoken Wheel, The 14. With a Wonder and a Wild Desire 15. Don't Let Me Die Still Wondering
| Details | | Contributing Artists: | Lucinda Williams | | Producer: | Ted Hutt | | Distributor: | Alternative Dis. Alliance | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Flogging Molly: Dave King (vocals, acoustic guitar, banjo, bodhran, spoons); Nathen Maxwell (vocals, bass instrument); Dennis Casey (electric guitar, background vocals); Robert Schmidt (banjo, bouzouki, mandola, mandolin, background vocals); Bridget Regan (fiddle, whistle, Uilleann pipe, background vocals); Matt Hensley (accordion, concertina); George Schwindt (drums, percussion). Additional personnel include: Lucinda Williams (vocals); Lee Thornburg (horns); Craig Jackman. Recording information: Hollywood Sound Recorders, Hollywood, California; Cello Studios, Hollywood, California; Ocean Studios, Burbank, California. For its third album, WITHIN A MILE OF HOME, Flogging Molly continues to follow the lead of musical predecessors the Pogues by seamlessly bridging the chasm between traditional Irish music and punk rock. Fans can credit frontman Dave King, who went from membership in Motorhead offshoot Fastway to leading a septet that makes a glorious noise via copious amounts of fiddle, tin whistle, and accordion, with equally large doses of guitar. Flogging Molly rides a ramshackle rhythm that doesn't let up throughout 15 songs that would be equally at home in CBGB's or a pub. King's broad interests range from a recounting of Irish slaves being sent to Barbados by English leader Oliver Cromwell ("Tobacco Island") and music's role in keeping Celtic tradition alive throughout historical turmoil ("The Wanderlust") to outrage at Bush's warmongering in the name of God ("Screaming at the Wailing Wall"). Lucinda Williams's guest vocals on "Factory Girls" may come as a surprise initially, but once this tale of an Irish housekeeper gets rolled out, Fairport Convention-like nuances reverberate. WITHIN A MILE OF HOME is yet another example of Irish culture and punk going together wonderfully, like corned beef and cabbage.
Editorial Reviews WITHIN A MILE proves that sticking with your strengths has its advantages. - 4 out of 5 Alternative Press
| See an error? Submit a change request |