Product Details
Titanic Days [2CD]

Titanic Days [2CD]
Kirsty MacColl

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Track Listing

Disc 1:

  1. You Know It’s You
  2. Soho Square
  3. Angel
  4. Last Day Of The Summer
  5. Bad
  6. Can’t Stop Killing You
  7. Titanic Days
  8. Don’t Go Home
  9. Big Boy On A Saturday Night
  10. Just Woke Up
  11. Tomorrow Never Comes

Disc 2:

  1. Angel (Piano Mix)
  2. Fabulous Garden
  3. King Kong
  4. Dear John
  5. Miss Otis Regrets
  6. Free World (Live)
  7. Touch Me
  8. Irish Cousin
  9. Angel 9Single Mix)
  10. Angel (Stuart Crichton Mix)
  11. Angel (Into The Light Mix)
  12. Angel (Apollo 440 Remix)

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #8571 in Music
  • Released on: 2005-04-11
  • Number of discs: 2

Customer Reviews

By Far Kirsty's Best Album5
I bought this back when it was released in the mid nighties and am still listening to it today (2008)!!
The quality of the music and lyrics on this album are quite simply breathtaking and never seem to date, all the ingredients of a TRUE classic.
My only regret is that I never made the effort to go see her live back then.

If you only ever buy one Kirsty CD, or in fact if you only ever buy one CD at all by anyone, then make it this one! You will not regret it!

Beautiful5
I wish I could describe in words just how beautiful this album is, but I just cannot find the adjectives! Just to know that Kirsty once walked on this planet makes me feel wanted. Kirsty is often compared to other female artists but to me she is up there with the great writers like Willy Russell, John Betjeman, Carol Ann Duffy, Jennifer Donnelly and Philip Larkin. She was a poet who put her words to music and this music is real. Many of the tracks are all by Kirsty but the ones that are not are co-written with the astonishingly talented Mark Nevin who I've had the privelage to recieve two e-mails from. This is a unique, unusual, witty and deeply moving piece of art from one of the greatest person to ever walk the planet.

Kirsty's classic album5
The re-release of Titanic Days in 2005, some 10 years after its original appearance, is an absolute delight. The album originally appeared on IRS in late 1993 in America only. A UK release followed in Spring 2004, but a combination of very poor promotion and the usual stupidity of Radio One programmers drowned the album at birth. It was a criminal loss. This album is an absolute classic. Kirsty later described it as her "sad divorce album". Written with ex Fairground Attraction legend Mark E. Nevin, the album chronicles Kirsty at a low ebb as her marriage to Steve Lillywhite fell apart. But it's not a depressing album. There is anger, frustration (The marvellous opening line - "I want to shake up this world and not to feel so useless"), melancoly, sadness (Soho Square - her best song?), anger (the title track) but also humour ("I want a brief encounter in a stolen car/a hand on my buttock in a Spanish bar). There is an attractive dance sensibility to the penultimate song "Just woke up". This is not the story of someone getting out of bed in the morning. This is the realisation that you are in an impossible situation, which reaches its peak in the extraordinary closing track "Tomorrow never comes". The beginning sounds like a requiem. "Let my tears dry/in the light of a setting sun" sings Kirsty, which more or less describes how she spent some time in subsequent years escaping the British winter by travelling to Cuba. ZTT have more than redeemed themselves with this re-release. The second CD features Kirsty's "Dear John" letter to Steve Lillywhite. At the time it was thought to be too close to the bone and given to Eddi Reader. It was nominated for an Ivor Novello award as the best song musically and lyrically. It should have won. There are also unreleased songs such as "King Kong", and those long impossible to find unless you are in Australia B sides "Touch me" and "Fabulous Garden", which is worth the price of the album if only for the strength of its lyric - "and if I gave you an inch for every time I was hurt/I'd be pushing up daisies six feet under the dirt/and if you gave me a flower for every broken vow/we'd have a fabulous garden by now".
Kirsty wrote so many great pop songs, but this is her most coherent album. Buy the greatest hits, revel in the joy of the "From Croydon to Cuba" anthology, but if you want that rare gem - an album you will listen to and love day in day out for years - you must buy "Titanic Days".