Released in 1968 in:
• the UK and several EU countries on Major Minor; MMLP 11 (mono)
• the UK and several EU countries on Major Minor; SMLP 11 (stereo)
• Canada on Epic; BE 805
• Japan on Nippon Columbia; YS-2069-M
• Spain on Sonoplay: S - 21 079
Side One:
1. Three O'Clock Flamingo Street
2. Harlem Lady
3. Four Seasons
4. Turn Homeward Stranger
5. Letter To My Love
6. City Blues
Side Two:
1. Reflections
2. Poverty Street
3. And I'm Free
4. September Winds
5. A Young Man's Dream
6. Born To Ramble
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Released in the UK and several EU countries
front sleeve MMLP 11
back sleeve MMLP 11
side 1 MMLP 11
side 2 MMLP 11
front sleeve SMLP 11
back sleeve SMLP 11
side 1 (version 1) SMLP 11
side 1 (version 1) SMLP 11
side 2 (version 2) SMLP 11
side 1 (version 2) SMLP 11
Released in Canada
front sleeve
back sleeve
side A
side B
Released in Japan
front sleeve
back sleeve
front sleeve with original OBI
back sleeve with original OBI
An OBI strip is a paper band or a folded paper flap as an addition to vinyl sleeves.
The OBI strips are best known from the Japanese import releases
where they usually contain the release info in Japanese.
side 1
side 2
This Japanese edition contains all lyrics in both English and Japanese.
If you want to read the translation of the back sleeve click here
Released in Spain
front sleeve
back sleeve
detail back sleeve
Translation detail back sleeve Spanish to English:
DAVID McWILLIAMS Volume 2 speaks for itself. DAVID has only been on the scene for a year and it seems incredible that, once again, all the titles on this album -as it did on his first LP- are composed by himself. It is not often for an Artist to be able to write in such a short space of time so many songs and of such a massively recognized quality.
This 6-foot-tall, blue-eyed Irishman with unruly black hair is making an interesting contribution to pop music, bringing "news" of a "folk" ancestry that is, at times, highly revealing. None of DAVID's ideas can be described as conventional. He has not yet found the girl who can replace in his artistic mind the already legendary name of PEARLY SPENCER.
In fact, DAVID does not believe in marriage, he is stifled by cities and "regulation" and, at every opportunity, he escapes to the country, to the open spaces. He adores children: he thinks that only they remain in the world as people devoid of affectation or "pose".
Cara A
Cara B