
False Lights is a British folk rock group featuring folk visionaries Jim Moray and Sam Carter. The band developed through a shared love of folk and heavy guitar music producing a distinct sound which has more to do with Radiohead than Steeleye Span: an explosion of loud, electric, guitar-driven folk for the 21st century. On the band's four tracks on the False Lights EP, the first track, 'Skewball', is a song recorded originally by A.L.Lloyd in the early 1960s, and then again by Steeleye Span and Martin Carthy in the early 1970s.
As an Amazon Associate, Spinn Radio earns from qualifying purchases.
Polly On The Shore
The Wife Of Ushers Well
Skewball
Drink Old England Dry
Crossing The Bar
Tyne Of Harrow
The Charlesworth Hornpipe
The Banks Of Newfoundland
The Maid Of Australia
The Indian's Petition
Oh Death
Babylon
How Can I Keep from Singing
William Glenn
Far In Distant Lands
Black Velvet Band
Murder In The Red Barn
Henry Martin
Captain Kidd
The Ombudsman
Serving Man Become A Queen
How Can I Keep From Singing?
Skewball - Live at Folk East
The Wife of Ushers Well - Live at Folk East
Crossing the Bar - Live at Folk East
Polly On the Shore - Live at Folk East
The Charlesworth Hornpipe - Live at Folk East
The Banks of Newfoundland - Live at Folk East
Polly On the Shore (Live at Folk East)
Babylon (BG Eq1)
Skewball (Live At Folk East)
Black Velvet Band (BG Eq1)
Drink Old England (BG Eq1)
Trip To Priddy
Serving Man (BG Eq1)
Captain Kidd (BG Eq1)
Henry Martin (BG Eq1)
William Glenn (BG Eq1)
Serving Man
The Ombudsman Rev Mix (BG Eq1)
BONUS Trip To Priddy
Far In Distant Lands (BG Eq1)
Trip To Priddy (Bonus Track)
The Wife of Ushers Well (Live at Folk East)
The Indian’s Petition
Crossing the Bar (Live at Folk East)
The Charlesworth Hornpipe (Live at Folk East)
Captain Kidd (Radio 2 Session, 3 January 2018)
How Can I Keep From Singing-
BBC Radio 2 Folk Show with Mark Radcliffe, live session 10/12/14
Tune into 50,000+ live radio stations from every corner of the world on an interactive 3D globe with audio-reactive visualizations.