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  1. View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 2004 CD release of "Sunday Fables" on Discogs.

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  2. 2 mar 2004 · Sunday Fables by Edward Rogers released in 2004. Find album reviews, track lists, credits, awards and more at AllMusic.

  3. SUNDAY FABLES (2004) Tracks. Who Knew The World Would End (3:01) * It Was Love (So It Couldn't Last) (3:17) Germantown (4:21) Crushed By The Inside (4:46) In The Garden Of Who You Were (2:52) Make It Go Away (4:23) Innocent Times (3:00) Sunday Fables (1:00) Laughing Ghost (3:00) Mercury Wheel (2:25) Building Winter (2:39) All Your Kingdom (3:39) *

  4. 27 gen 2004 · Sunday Fables reflects Rogerss British roots and then some. Raised on the great pop music of the ’60s and ’70s, Rogers and Usher collaborate to give you songs that reflect diverse musical...

  5. www.edwardrogersmusic.com › alsobyedwardrogersEdward Rogers

    The album exhibits contemporary pop through a prism of Kinks/Ray Davies, Zombies, Byrds and other influences, and the result is every bit as strong as Rogers' debut disc "Sunday Fables". Long may you run, Sir Edward.-JANGLE ON! You Haven’t Been Where I’ve Been is a wonderfully produced collection of laid back rock songs.

  6. His first album, Sunday Fables, was written and recorded with New York scene vet George Usher, who brought along a violinist and cellist (the venerable Jane Scarpantoni) to provide baroque atmospherics.

  7. Rogers’ first solo album Sunday Fables was released in 2004 on Not Lame Recordings. The following year his Folk/Brit-inspired trio, Bedsit Poets (whose name was given to them by The Zombies’ Colin Blunstone ), released The Summer That Changed on Bongo Beat Records.