Description
Check the exclusive video showing this 12″ for sale
Check the exclusive video showing this 12″ for sale
His last single, “Nineteen”, released a few weeks before his death, was produced by Paul Hardcastle. It bore no relation to the producers’ chart-topping single of the same title some months earlier.
Here is the explanation of the title for NINETEEN: he got the name 19 when a group of bikers came into the bar where Phil was sitting, and one of them slammed his fist on the bar and said “I’m bad. Give me a beer”, Phil just said, oh yea, noticed the 19 chapter of a biker group on their jackets. Then his talent lead him to the lyrics from just one idea like that. It is said to have been in Texas.
A Rock Icon’s Swan Song
‘Nineteen,’ was released at the tail end of 1985 shortly before Philip Lynott’s untimely death. The track was produced by Paul Hardcastle, who oddly enough, had a major hit with a completely different song with the same name only a few months before!
Thin Lizzy, as every music fan is aware, was one of the most influential heavy rock acts of the 1970s and one of Ireland’s most celebrated musical exports. What really set them apart from the crowd was charismatic front-man, Philip Lynott and his unique vocal style and magnetic stage presence. By the mid-nineteen eighties however, Thin Lizzy had broken up after a string of successful albums and tours and the band members had gone their separate ways.
Phil continued working however, performing as a solo artist, collaborating with Belfast native and former Thin Lizzy comrade, Gary Moore and even founded a new band called Grand Slam who sadly, never really got off the starting blocks. It’s fair to say though, that by this point in time his star had fallen and his long-term heroin addiction was beginning to take it’s toll on his physical well-being and his creativity.
Unfortunately, It didn’t chart as well as expected but it’s still a fantastic song with a cool video to boot. Philip’s natural charisma really comes to the fore and he looks as comfortable as ever before the cameras. There’s no visible hint at all to betray the fact that he wasn’t too well at the time, as his years of drug abuse had eventually caught up with him. Sadly, he died only a few short weeks later.
While promoting the track in late ’85, Philip talked excitedly about the future, about further collaborations with Gary Moore, and about a possible Thin Lizzy reunion. It’s a real shame that none of these things came to pass. This track, however, displays the kind of potential for further greatness that Philip Lynott still had within him, and had he survived, the nineteen eighties could’ve been a great decade for him.
Philip Lynott passed away in January 1986 and while Ireland lost one of her most famous sons, the music world lost a true rock and roll icon. Thin Lizzy seems to find a new crop of eager fans with every generation, helped in no small part by the amount of celebrated artists who have covered their music and cite them as a source of inspiration. Iron Maiden, Bon Jovi, Megadeth and Overkill have all covered Lizzy classics and who could forget the huge hit Metallica had with ‘Whiskey in the Jar’ in 1998, which still features in their live set today
Phil Lynott Nineteen
Label: Polydor 883 571-1
Format: Vinyl, 12″
Country: West Germany
Released: 1985
Genre: Rock, Blues
Style: Blues Rock, Pop Rock
Tracklist:
A Phil Lynott Nineteen 5:29
B1 Phil Lynott Nineteen (Dub Mix) 5:27
B2 Thin Lizzy A Night In The Life Of An Old Blues Singer 4:56 unreleased. Thin Lizzy’s Gary Moore.
Featuring Gary Moore
Producer Philip Lynott*, Will Reid-Dick
Credits:
Guitar Robin George (tracks: A, B1)
Keyboards Paul Hardcastle (tracks: A, B1)
Producer Paul Hardcastle (tracks: A, B1)
Written-By Philip Lynott*
Notes:
“A Night In The Life Of An Old Blues Singer” is a previously unreleased track from Thin Lizzy featuring Gary Moore.
Barcode: 042288357117
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