Long Distance Swimmer | |
Type: | Studio album |
Artist: | Adrian Crowley |
Cover: | Adrian Crowley's Long Distance Swimmer album cover.jpg |
Released: | 2007 |
Recorded: | Foxrock, County Dublin, Ireland |
Label: | Tin Angel Records |
Prev Title: | A Northern Country |
Prev Year: | 2004 |
Next Title: | Season of the Sparks |
Next Year: | 2009 |
Long Distance Swimmer is the fourth studio album released by Irish singer-songwriter Adrian Crowley. It was recorded during a one-week period in the home of Crowley's sister in the suburb of Foxrock, County Dublin, was released on the Tin Angel record label, and features contributions from other musicians, such as James Yorkston.
The album was released as soon as it was recorded as, according to Crowley, he became "fed up waiting".[1] [2] It was recorded with engineer Stephen Shannon.[3] The record received positive reviews and was nominated for the Choice Music Prize.[1] The NME said it was "a lo-furnished, snug, auburn-tinged folk album which calls to mind Bill Callahan, Johnny Cash, and Edwyn Collins".[2] The Irish Independents John Meagher named it his favourite album of 2007 and his sixteenth best Irish album of the decade, while his colleague Eamon Sweeney suggested Crowley's record was one of the few Irish albums preventing that year from being "an absolute stinker".[4] [5] [6] Lauren Murphy, who reviewed the Long Distance Swimmer for entertainment.ie, gave it three out of five stars and said it was "certainly the sort of album that's best appreciated when aligned with a certain mood; but, nonetheless, like its title, it has a determined durability that can only be admired".[7] Ian Gittins, who reviewed Long Distance Swimmer for The Guardian, also gave it three out of five stars and called the record "a lo-fi, high-intensity collection of acoustic musings that suggest Van Morrison singing with Red House Painters", adding "Crowley's rich brown croon inevitably recalls Nick Drake or Tim Buckley, but a more apposite musical touchstone is Badly Drawn Boy, or the Divine Comedy's Neil Hannon eschewing his clever-clever wordplay in order to sink into a sepia reverie".[8] Ed Power, who reviewed the album for Hot Press, gave it four out of five stars and called Long Distance Swimmer "a goose-bump inducing collection of folk ballads and bare-boned post-rock".[9]
Long Distance Swimmer was nominated for the Choice Music Prize for Irish Album of the Year 2007 but lost to Super Extra Bonus Party's Super Extra Bonus Party LP.[10] [11] [12]
|-| 2009 || Long Distance Swimmer || Irish Album of the Year 2007 || |-