MISC
2009
Sunny Side Up
About This Album
When Scot singer/songwriter Paolo Nutini issued his debut album in 2006 -- all of its songs were written before his 18th birthday -- there was no doubt, despite his youthful demeanor, that he was the real thing. He stood out from the 21st century plague of the young, confessional songwriting throng because of his unusual depth, canny melodic sensibility, and homemade but taut production. His singles, "New Shoes," and "Jenny Don't Be Hasty," were wrapped in rock & roll classicism and bore the attitude of Dion's "Teenager in Love" and the romanticism of Jonathan Richman's "That Summer Feeling." With Sunny Side Up, his sophomore effort, Nutini makes a giant leap forward. Not only has he moved a few levels north in terms of his use of harmony, melody, and broadening genres, his lyrics have gotten bolder and more sophisticated. With the help of Ethan Johns, Nutini has taken huge chunks of America's (and Scotland's) pop and folk pasts and reshaped them in his own image; he's all but left his previous identity behind.

Nutini recorded and produced the original sessions himself with his band the Vipers -- Donny Little, Mike McCaid, Dave Nelson, Seamus Simon, Gavin Fitzjohn, and Fraser Speirs -- and Johns added some production details and did a load of mixing.
Track List (try tracks 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8 and 9)

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