Cannot Buy My Soul (2CDs)
#8B0030 $33.00
The Songs of Kev Carmody – double CD
Kev Carmody is not only one of the most respected singer/songwriters in the country, but also one of Aboriginal Australia's most visible ambassadors. This 2-disc album, features some of Australia's finest singers/songwriters paying tribute to the highly respected & admired Kev Carmody, with the second disc containing Carmody's original versions. The high calibre of artists featured on Disc 1- Bernard Fanning, The Herd, Tex Perkins, The Waifs, Missy Higgins, Augie March, Clare Bowditch, The John Butler Trio and many more - is testament to the level of respect shared amongst the Australian musical community, and also the impact that Kev has had on Australian music.
The album was put together and recorded throughout 2006 by Paul Kelly, who describes Kev Carmody's body of work as one of our 'great cultural treasures, incorporating oral history, the ongoing hurt of dispossession and the healing power of nature... influential and highly regarded in all corners of the country'.
>>Visit the Kev Carmody website
Track listing
Disc 1
1. I've Been Moved - Dan Kelly
2. Thou Shalt Not Steal - John Butler Trio
3. Elly - Bernard Fanning
4. The Young Dancer Is Dead - Last Kinection
5. From Little Things Big Things Grow - The Waifs
6. River Of Tears - The Drones
7. On The Wire - Troy Cassar Daly
8. Cannot Buy My Soul - Archie Roach
9. Moonstruck - Sara Storer
10. This Land Is Mine - Dan Sultan And Scott Wilson
11. Darkside - Tex Perkins
12. Blood Red Rose - Clare Bowditch
13. Comrade Jesus Christ - The Herd
14. Images Of London - Steve Kilby
15. Droving Woman - Augie March / Missy Higgins / Paul Kelly
16. Eulogy For A Black Man - The Pigram Brothers
Disc 2
1. I've Been Moved
2. Thou Shalt Not Steal
3. Elly
4. The Young Dancer Is Dead
5. From Little Things Big Things Grow
6. River Of Tears
7. On The Wire
8. Cannot Buy My Soul
9. Moonstruck
10. This Land Is Mine
11. Darkside
12. Blood Red Rose
13. Comrade Jesus Christ
14. Images Of London
15. Droving Woman
16. Eulogy For A Black Man
