Six Strings | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | May 2005 | |||
Studio | The Clarendon Hotel, Katoomba The Sandringham Hotel, Newton | |||
Genre | Pop rock | |||
Length | 65:30 | |||
Label | Liberation Music | |||
Ian Moss chronology | ||||
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Singles from Six Strings | ||||
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Six Strings is the fourth studio album by Australian musician Ian Moss, released in May 2005. [1] [2] It is the first acoustic album recorded by Moss and includes re-recorded tracks from his solo career, Cold Chisel songs and covers.
Moss said “It took a bit of nerve for me to unplug and play acoustic, but it injected this freshness into my playing. It was a significant new path for me.” [3]
In 2015, Moss announced a national acoustic theatre tour in celebration of the 10th anniversary of Six Strings with Moss saying "I'm amazed at how much colour and variation and emotion I've been able to get with just voice, guitar and a foot tapping on the floor. Less is more.". [4] The album was re-released with five extra tracks and a couple of alternate versions [5] and was certified gold in Australia in 2015.
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Telephone Booth" | Don Walker | 3:13 |
2. | "Saturday Night" | Walker | 3:54 |
3. | "Tucker's Daughter" | Walker, Ian Moss | 4:40 |
4. | "Love Will Carry Us Along" | Phil Small | 4:24 |
5. | "Never Before" | Moss | 6:03 |
6. | "Green River" | John Fogerty | 5:02 |
7. | "Two Seconds Too Long" | Ian Rilen | 2:48 |
8. | "Angel Eyes" | Matt Dennis, Earl Brent | 3:50 |
9. | "The Party's Over" | Walker | 4:53 |
10. | "All Alone on a Rock" | Walker | 3:18 |
11. | "Bow River" | Moss | 7:14 |
12. | "Catfish Blues" | Robert Petway | 4:36 |
13. | "My Baby" | Phil Small | 3:53 |
14. | "Purple Haze" | Jimi Hendrix | 3:29 |
15. | "Message from Baghdad" | Ian Moss, Peter Moss | 3:20 |
16. | "Songs for Julian" | Moss | 0:53 |
CD 1
CD 2
Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
---|---|---|
Australia (ARIA) [6] | Gold | 35,000^ |
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone. |
Cold Chisel are an Australian pub rock band, which formed in Adelaide in 1973 by mainstay members Ian Moss on guitar and vocals, Steve Prestwich on drums and Don Walker on piano and keyboards. They were soon joined by Jimmy Barnes on lead vocals and, in 1975, Phil Small became their bass guitarist. The group disbanded in late 1983 but subsequently reformed several times. Musicologist Ian McFarlane wrote that they became "one of Australia's best-loved groups" as well as "one of the best live bands", fusing "a combination of rockabilly, hard rock and rough-house soul'n'blues that was defiantly Australian in outlook."
Ian Richard Moss is an Australian rock musician from Alice Springs. He is the founding mainstay guitarist and occasional singer of Cold Chisel. In that group's initial eleven year phase from 1973 to 1984, Moss was recorded on all five studio albums, three of which reached number one on the national Kent Music Report Albums Chart. In August 1989 he released his debut solo album, Matchbook, which peaked at number one on the ARIA Albums Chart. It was preceded by his debut single, "Tucker's Daughter", which reached number two on the related ARIA Singles Chart in March. The track was co-written by Moss with Don Walker, also from Cold Chisel. Moss had another top ten hit with "Telephone Booth" in June 1989.
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Richard Clapton is an Australian singer-songwriter-guitarist and producer. His solo top 20 hits on the Kent Music Report Singles Chart are "Girls on the Avenue" (1975) and "I Am an Island" (1982). He reached the top 20 on the related Albums Chart with Goodbye Tiger (1977), Hearts on the Nightline (1979), The Great Escape (1982), and The Very Best of Richard Clapton.
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