Green Roses (original) (raw)

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1999 studio album by Orthodox Celts

Green Roses
Studio album by Orthodox Celts
Released 1999
Recorded June–November 1999
Studio Academia Studios, Belgrade
Genre Irish folk Celtic rock
Label Metropolis Records
Producer Aleksandar Radosavljević
Orthodox Celts chronology
The Celts Strike Again(1997) Green Roses(1999) A Moment Like the Longest Day(2002)

Green Roses is the third studio album by the Serbian Irish folk/Celtic rock band Orthodox Celts released in 1999.

Green Roses features sixteen songs, half of which were covers of traditional songs, and the other half the band's original songs.[1] The album was produced by Aleksandar Radosavljević, and as guests appeared Dragoljub Marković (keyboards), Aleksandar Eraković (keyboards) and Goran Stojković (backing vocals).[1]

In 2021, the album was polled 57th on the list of 100 Best Serbian Albums Since the Breakup of SFR Yugoslavia. The list was published in the book Kako (ni)je propao rokenrol u Srbiji (How Rock 'n' Roll in Serbia (Didn't) Came to an End).[2]

Green Roses track listing

No. Title Lyrics Music Length
1. "St. Patrick Was a Gentleman" Traditional Traditional 02:19
2. "Sindidun" Aleksandar Petrović Ana Đokić 03:42
3. "Green Roses" Aleksandar Petrović Ana Đokić 03:15
4. "Marie's Wedding" Traditional Traditional 04:28
5. "Rare Old Mountain Dew" Traditional Traditional 03:20
6. "Gravel Walk" Traditional 03:29
7. "Stand Up to Your Devils" Colette Ioannidou Ana Đokić 03:44
8. "Leads Me On" Aleksandar Petrović Ana Đokić 04:02
9. "Rocky Road to Dublin / Down the River" Aleksandar Petrović Ana Đokić 04:24
10. "Merry Sisters" Traditional 02:10
11. "Bean Na Shi" Colette Ioannidou Ana Đokić 03:00
12. "Me, Myself and Sky" Aleksandar Petrović Ana ĐokićDejan Lalić 03:25
13. "Whisky You're The Devil" Traditional Traditional 01:59
14. "Far Away" Aleksandar Petrović Ana Đokić 02:58
15. "Wind That Shakes the Barley / Sailor on the Rock" Traditional Traditional 02:29
16. "The Beggarman" Traditional Traditional 03:33

Additional personnel

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In 2021 the album was polled 57th on the list of 100 Best Serbian Albums Since the Breakup of SFR Yugoslavia. The list was published in the book Kako (ni)je propao rokenrol u Srbiji (How Rock 'n' Roll in Serbia (Didn't) Came to an End).[2]

  1. ^ a b Janjatović, Petar (2024). Ex YU rock enciklopedija 1960–2023. Belgrade: self-released / Makart. p. 372.
  2. ^ a b Antonić, Duško (2021). Kako (ni)je propao rokenrol u Srbiji. Belgrade: Take It Or Leave It. p. 203.