Isobel Campbell discography

Source From Wikipedia English.

Scottish musician and vocalist Isobel Campbell has released four solo studio albums, seven singles, a studio album in collaboration with Bill Wells and three with Mark Lanegan as well as several cameos on other artists' records. Isobel Campbell debuted in 1996 as cellist and sometime vocalist of indie pop band Belle & Sebastian. Despite limited commercial success, Belle & Sebastian have been hailed as the greatest Scottish band ever.

Isobel Campbell discography
Isobel Campbell performing in Bologna, Italy, on 31 January 2007
Studio albums4
Music videos2
Singles7
Collaborations3
Other appearances11

Campbell released two records under the pseudonym of The Gentle Waves whilst still a member of Belle & Sebastian, which she left in the midst of the band's 2002 North American tour. In 2003 she released Amorino, her first album under her own name, which received mixed reviews from critics. 2006 saw the release of Ballad of the Broken Seas, a critically acclaimed collaboration with Mark Lanegan which was later nominated for the Mercury Music Prize. This was followed by a solo album, Milkwhite Sheets, which spawned the single "O Love Is Teasin'". Campbell reunited with Lanegan to record Sunday at Devil Dirt, which was released on May 13, 2008.

Studio albums

Year Title
1999 The Green Fields of Foreverland[I]
  • Released: 5 April 1999
  • Label: Jeepster (JR #4026)
  • Format: CD, LP
2000 Swansong for You[I]
  • Released: 6 November 2000
  • Label: Jeepster (JR #4051)
  • Format: CD, LP
2003 Amorino
  • Released: 7 October 2003
  • Label: Snowstorm (ST #00020651)
  • Format: CD, LP
2006 Milkwhite Sheets
  • Released: 23 October 2006
  • Label: V2 (V2 #1043452)
  • Format: CD, LP
2020 There Is No Other

^ I Released under the pseudonym of The Gentle Waves.

Extended Plays

Year Title
2020 Voices In The Sky

Collaborations

With Bill Wells

Year Title
2002 Ghost of Yesterday
  • Released: 17 June 2002
  • Label: Creeping Bent (CB #00027790)
  • Format: CD

With Mark Lanegan

Year Title Peak chart positions
BEL

FRA

ITA

IRE

NLD

NOR

SWE

SWI

UK

2006 Ballad of the Broken Seas
  • Released: 7 March 2006
  • Label: V2 (V2 #1035821)
  • Format: CD, LP
15 96 27 21 32 51 56 38
2008 Sunday at Devil Dirt
  • Released: 13 May 2008
  • Label: V2 (V2 #1050622)
  • Format: CD, LP
6 96 41 28 69 25 37 38
2010 Hawk
  • Released: 16 August 2010
  • Label: V2
  • Formats: CD, LP
29
"—" denotes a release that did not chart.

Singles

Year Song Album
1999 "Weathershow" The Green Fields of Foreverland
2000 "Falling from Grace" Swansong for You
2004 "Time Is Just the Same" Amorino
2006 "Ramblin' Man"[A] Ballad of the Broken Seas
"Honey Child What Can I Do?"[B]
"O Love Is Teasin'" Milkwhite Sheets
2008 "Who Built the Road" Sunday at Devil Dirt
"Come on Over (Turn Me On)"
Notes
  • A ^ Appeared in the UK Singles Chart at number 116.
  • B ^ Appeared in the UK Singles Chart at number 199.

Music videos

Year Song Director
1999 "Weathershow"
2000 "Falling From Grace"
2006 "Ramblin Man" Vrnda Daktor
"Time Is Just the Same"
2019 "Ant Life" Mike Aho
"Hey World"

Other appearances

Year Collaborations Song(s) Album Ref.
1997 Snow Patrol vocals on "NYC" Songs for Polarbears
1998 Arab Strap cello on "The Clearing" The Week Never Starts Round Here
2001 Mount Vernon Arts Lab cello on "The Black Drop" The Séance at Hobs Lane
Future Pilot A.K.A. vocals on "Ananda Is The Ocean" Tiny Waves, Mighty Sea
2002 Looper cello on "Good Girls" The Snare
2004 Kinobe vocals on "Luciole" and "I Am One" Wide Open
2006 Kama Aina cello on "Millport" and "Club Kama Aina", cello and vocals on "Car Song" Club Kama Aina
2007 Paul Leonard-Morgan vocals on "Wilderness" Filmtales
Blanche cello on "No Matter Where You Go..." Little Amber Bottles
Pantaleimon cello on "We Love", vocals, cello, piano and glockenspiel on "High Star" Mercy Oceans
Annie Lennox vocals on "Sing" Songs of Mass Destruction
2017 The Jesus and Mary Chain vocals on "Song for a Secret" and "The Two of Us" Damage and Joy

References

General
Specific

External links