Support our efforts, sign up to a full membership!
(Start for free)
Register or login with just your e-mail address
Oldies 16/12/2022

Marianne Faithfull's Kissin' Time Album To Be Reissued

Hot Songs Around The World

Unwritten
Natasha Bedingfield
343 entries in 22 charts
Cruel Summer
Taylor Swift
664 entries in 20 charts
Beautiful Things
Benson Boone
489 entries in 26 charts
Stumblin' In
Cyril
223 entries in 16 charts
End Of Beginning
DJO
243 entries in 22 charts
Austin
Dasha
188 entries in 16 charts
I Like The Way You Kiss Me
Artemas
280 entries in 26 charts
Too Sweet
Hozier
254 entries in 22 charts
Lose Control
Teddy Swims
607 entries in 25 charts
Espresso
Sabrina Carpenter
231 entries in 26 charts
Texas Hold 'Em
Beyonce
298 entries in 23 charts
Fortnight
Taylor Swift & Post Malone
173 entries in 25 charts
Lunch
Billie Eilish
112 entries in 24 charts
Houdini
Eminem
80 entries in 23 charts
Marianne Faithfull's Kissin' Time Album To Be Reissued
New York, NY (Top40 Charts) Originally released in 2002, Kissin' Time is a collection of co-written collaborations with an impressive lineup of contemporary musicians and producers Beck, Billy Corgan, Dave Stewart, Blur, Jarvis Cocker, Matt Sweeney and Etienne Daho.

The album is issued for the very first time on heavyweight vinyl.

The reissued CD and digital format include a selection of previously unreleased bonus material including two unheard recordings, The World Between and If You Don't Touch Yourself.

There's something defiantly fearless about Kissin' Time, from the title track to Sex With Strangers to the gorgeous, synth-laden balladry of I'm On Fire, a song Faithfull described as "a hymn to love" and originally intended to co-write with The Beach Boys' Brian Wilson.

The album's lyrical frankness, as blunt in its depiction of the life of German singer Nico (perpetually "in the shit", as Song For Nico puts it) as it is about Faithfull's relationship with her parents on Like Being Born, is hardly without precedent in Faithfull's oeuvre: from Sister Morphine to Broken English to her two volumes of memoirs, Marianne Faithfull has seldom given the impression of being an artist much given to pulling her punches.

Kissin' Time was, as the singer put it, "about life and joy", a mood exacerbated by, of all things, Faithfull falling over and breaking her shoulder before its recording - "I had my life flash before my eyes," she later recalled, "I realised I could check out without guilt or shame, but instead I twisted in the air and landed on my shoulder… it was interesting to learn that I really wanted to live and it had a big effect on the record".

Faithfull is able to transcend the vagaries of fashion and changing taste; held in a different kind of regard to her peers. Kissin' Time assembled a cast of younger artists far hipper than one suspected Faithfull's more famous contemporaries could have mustered: Blur, Beck, Pulp, Smashing Pumpkins frontman Billy Corgan and lauded US alt-rock guitarist Matt Sweeney, shapeshifting French singer-songwriter Etienne Daho. "Aging rock stars take note," as one contemporary review of Kissin' Time put it.

When asked what drew younger artists to her, Faithfull usually either professed ignorance or self-deprecatingly suggested it was because she "had the best stories". Listening to Kissin' Time, you wonder if it might not be to do with her willingness to take risks, to step outside her comfort zone.






Most read news of the week


© 2001-2024
top40-charts.com (S6)
about | site map
contact | privacy
Page gen. in 0.4668660 secs // 4 () queries in 0.0047247409820557 secs


live