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Jessie Buckley & Bernard Butler

For All Our Days That Tear The Heart

Jessie Buckley & Bernard Butler

12 SONGS • 50 MINUTES • JUN 10 2022

  • TRACKS
    TRACKS
  • DETAILS
    DETAILS
TRACKS
DETAILS
1
The Eagle & The Dove
05:49
2
For All Our Days That Tear The Heart
05:00
3
20 Years A-Growing
04:03
4
Babylon Days
04:28
5
Seven Red Rose Tattoos
05:01
6
Footnotes On The Map
03:50
7
We've Run The Distance
03:27
8
We Haven’t Spoke About The Weather
04:18
9
Beautiful Regret
03:11
10
I Cried Your Tears
04:09
11
Shallow The Water
05:02
12
Catch The Dust
02:12
℗ 2022 Jessie Buckley & Bernard Butler © 2022 Jessie Buckley & Bernard Butler, under exclusive licence to Universal Music Operations Limited

Artist bios

Irish singer and actress Jessie Buckley emerged in 2008 as runner-up of the musical theater-themed TV competition I'd Do Anything before making her West End debut in 2009. As a trained actress, she appeared in several BBC television productions in the mid-2010s before starring in her first feature film, 2017's Beast. She proved her versatility as a singer on the blues-rock and country-styled songs of the soundtrack to the film Wild Rose, which received a wide release in 2019.

A native of Killarney, County Kerry, Buckley performed in musicals while attending Ursuline Secondary School, where her mother worked as a vocal coach. During that time, she was also a member of the Tipperary Millennium Orchestra, later studying piano, harp, and clarinet at the Royal Irish Academy of Music. In 2008, Buckley competed on the BBC's I'd Do Anything, a search for an unknown performer to play Nancy in a West End revival of Oliver! She finished in second place on the series in May, then earned the role of Anne Egermann in a revival of Sondheim's A Little Night Music that opened in London in October 2008. The production moved to the West End's Garrick Theatre in April 2009 and ran for three more months.

Buckley returned to the West End after graduating from The Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in 2013, joining a revival of Henry V starring Jude Law. In 2014, she appeared in an episode of TV detective series Endeavour. After portraying Marya Bolkonskaya in the BBC's War and Peace in 2016, she starred in the 2017 film Beast, a British psychological thriller set in the U.S. That year, she also appeared as a regular on the TV drama Taboo and as Honor Martin on The Last Post, both for BBC One. In 2018, Buckley had lead roles in the TV mini-series The Woman in White and the Nashville-set musical film Wild Rose before taking a supporting role in the 2019 film Judy, playing a production assistant to Renee Zellweger's Judy Garland. The following year, she was part of the all-star cast of the family film The Voyage of Doctor Doolittle. ~ Marcy Donelson

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Hailed by some critics as the greatest guitarist of his generation, Bernard Butler shied away from the ramifications of that statement, abandoning the Brit-pop pioneers Suede at the height of their career in 1994 to pursue his own muse. And, much like his idol Johnny Marr, Butler's solo career was anything but predictable, as he flipped between session work, a duo with David McAlmont, and eventually a recording career as a solo singer/songwriter.

Bernard Butler rose to prominence with Suede, the British indie band who fused glam crunch with the songcraft and exaggerated angst of the Smiths. Upon the release of their 1992 debut single "The Drowners," Suede were hailed by many corners of the British music press as the best band in Britain. In many ways, they lived up to the hype, as their eponymous 1993 debut broke sales records and kick-started the indie rock revolution that became as Brit-pop. Despite their success, there were significant signs of trouble behind the scenes. An introspective, quiet man, Butler didn't quite get on with the remaining three members, who tended to revel in the excesses of rock & roll. Although American success eluded them, Suede nevertheless earned a rabid cult in the States and they acted like stars on their first tour, which only alienated Butler more. His father died in the fall of 1993, prompting the band to cancel their tour.

Butler poured much of his sorrow into the creation of "Stay Together," a grandiose single that was Suede's first new music since their debut. Released to great expectations in the 1994, it was viewed as a disappointment, despite its high chart placing. Shortly afterward, the band began working on their second album, the orchestrated epic Dog Man Star. By the summer, tensions were at the breaking point, as illustrated by Butler's criticisms of Anderson in a rare interview with the English magazine Guitar. In August, he decided he had enough and he left the band; he would later criticize Dog Man Star quite heavily.

He didn't stay quiet long. Early in 1995, he hooked up with cult soul singer David McAlmont. It was unclear whether the teaming was permanent or temporary, but that summer they released two singles, "Yes" and "You Do," which were modest successes. By the fall, the duo had split up acrimoniously, with a compilation album, The Sound of McAlmont-Butler, being released early in 1996. For much of that year, he worked as a sideman, playing on albums by Aimee Mann and James' Tim Booth. Early in 1997, he was invited by Richard Ashcroft to play with the reunited Verve. Although the sessions went well, the Verve decided to patch up their differences with their guitarist, Nick McCabe. There were no hard feelings between Butler and the Verve, but the entire experience convinced him it was time to begin a solo career in earnest. He signed with Creation and began work on his first album, playing nearly all the instruments himself. Released in the fall of 1997, his first single, "Stay," indicated that he was going in a more subdued direction than Suede. Those suspicions were confirmed by his full-length debut, People Move On, a folk-tinged singer/songwriter album released to generally positive reviews in the spring of 1998. Friends and Lovers followed two years later. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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Album awards
2022NomineeMercury Prize
Album of the Year
Language of performance
English
Customer reviews
5 star
69%
4 star
18%
3 star
8%
2 star
3%
1 star
2%

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