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1993 studio album by Spirit of the West From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Faithlift is a 1993 album by Canadian band Spirit of the West.[2]
Faithlift | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | September 28, 1993 (Canada) May 10, 1994 (United States) | |||
Recorded | 1993 | |||
Genre | Folk rock | |||
Length | 50:00 | |||
Label | Warner Music Canada | |||
Producer | Michael Phillip Wojewoda | |||
Spirit of the West chronology | ||||
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It is the band's best-selling album, and includes their biggest Canadian Top 40 hit, "And if Venice Is Sinking." The album peaked at #27 on RPM's Top 100 albums chart the week of October 30, 1993.[3]
Although Faithlift is one of the band's rock albums, several songs (particularly "Sadness Grows" and "Death on the Beach") retain the Celtic folk flavour that the band was previously known for.[4]
The album includes many topical songs drawn from the news headlines: "Bone of Contention" mocks society's hypocrisy in the Pee-Wee Herman controversy, "Mum's the Word" is about the 1992 Giant Mine explosion, "God's Apprentice" addresses the Roman Catholic Church sex abuse scandal (which hit Canada several years earlier than it did the United States), and "Guildhall Witness" is about a race riot which the band encountered during its tour of England with The Wonder Stuff. "6th Floor" is about visiting Dallas and finding it impossible to resist going to see Dealey Plaza, the spot where John F. Kennedy was assassinated.
The album was reissued in 2008 on Rhino Records, concurrently with the release of the band's career retrospective Spirituality 1983-2008: The Consummate Compendium.
All songs by John Mann and Geoffrey Kelly.
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