Party_On_(song)

<i>Shots</i> (Damien Dempsey album)

Shots (Damien Dempsey album)

2005 studio album by Damien Dempsey


Shots is a 2005 studio album by the Irish singer-songwriter Damien Dempsey which was released in Ireland and the United Kingdom in March 2005. It is the third studio album released by the singer-songwriter. Brian Eno provides backing vocals on the opening track "Sing All Your Cares Away". The album discusses a diverse range of topics including oppression, slavery, drugs and poverty.

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Shots entered the Irish Albums Chart at No. 1 and reached platinum status. It went on to receive one nomination at the 2006 Meteor Awards.

Album information

Shots was Dempsey's third studio album, the successor to his 2003 platinum selling album Seize the Day which was the occasion during which his music became more noticed and appreciated.[4] Since then he has received praise from musicians such as Christy Moore, Sinéad O'Connor and Shane MacGowan, whilst Morrissey invited him on tour with him in 2004.[4] Shots was recorded in Rockfield Studio in Wales and produced by John Reynolds who has worked with Dempsey before.[4]

Song meanings

The third track on the album "St. Patrick's Day" begins with a guitar which slowly builds up into a combination of tin whistles, uilleann pipes and drums.[4] It describes pre-Celtic Tiger era Ireland.[4] The fifth track "Party On" discusses the negative aspect of Ireland's drugs culture.[4] The sixth track, "Colony", is a song about oppression and colonialism which is reworked from Dempsey's debut album, They Don't Teach This Shit in School.[4] The penultimate track, "Choctaw Nation", details the plight of the Native American Choctaw people, whilst the final track, "Spraypaint Backalley", features a line from Oscar Wilde – "we are all in the gutter but some of us are looking at the stars".[4]

Track listing

The album Shots contains ten tracks and is fifty minutes in length.[1][5]

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Reaction

The national broadcaster RTÉ gave the album four stars out of five in its review, stating that his music "shows an astute observation of Irish life" and praising him for "giving a voice to the downtrodden".[1] The songs "Sing All Our Cares Away", the opening track, and "Choctaw Nation", the penultimate one, were singled out for a special mention as was the new recording of "Colony".[1] "Party On" was praised for its irony and sarcasm, whilst Dempsey's approach to the music business is covered in the single "Patience", with comparisons made to the track "I've No Alibi' from his debut album.[1] The CLUAS reviewer noted that Shots was Dempsey's first step into mainstream music, with more melody present and "less anger".[4] Opening track "Sing all Your Cares Away" received high praise for its "sweet melody", harmonies described as "soothing and gentle" and the backing vocals of Brian Eno, the love song "Hold Me" was described as "a gentle ode to love with none of the frills or soppy sentimentality of usual love ballads" and the seventh track "Patience" has been praised for its slow build-up into a full band.[4]

Chart performance

The album debuted on the Irish Albums Chart at No. 1, going on to achieve platinum status in December 2005.[6]

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Awards

Meteor Music Awards

On 23 November 2005, it was announced that Shots had been nominated for a Meteor Music Award in the Best Irish Album category.[7] However, at the 2006 Meteor Awards on 2 February 2006, the album lost to U2's eleventh studio album, How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb.[8]

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References

  1. "Damien Dempsey – Shots". RTÉ. 3 March 2005. Retrieved 15 March 2009.
  2. "A review of his album 'Shots'". CLUAS. Retrieved 15 March 2009.
  3. "Shots track listing". AllMusic. Retrieved 17 March 2009.
  4. "Damien Dempsey – the story so far". The Munster Express. 2 July 2008. Retrieved 15 March 2009.
  5. "Meteor Award nominations announced". RTÉ. 2 November 2005. Retrieved 16 March 2009.
  6. "Three wins for U2 at Meteor Awards". RTÉ. 3 February 2006. Retrieved 14 December 2007.

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