Artist's albums
Homesick
2001 · album
Walking Back Home
1999 · album
Riches
1997 · album
Our Town - The Greatest Hits
1994 · compilation
Whatever You Say, Say Nothing
1993 · album
Fellow Hoodlums
1991 · album
Ooh Las Vegas: B-sides, Film Tracks & Sessions
1990 · album
Peace Will Come (Acoustic Version)
2023 · single
Chocolate Girl (Acoustic Version)
2023 · single
Riding on the Tide of Love
2021 · album
Riding on the Tide of Love
2020 · single
The Lock Inn Session
2020 · EP
City of Love
2020 · album
Wonderful
2020 · single
City of Love
2019 · single
Live at the Glasgow Barrowlands
2017 · album
Gone
2016 · single
Believers
2016 · album
This Is a Love Song
2016 · single
A New House
2014 · album
Turn (Remix)
2013 · single
You'll Know It's Christmas
2013 · single
The Rest
2012 · album
The Hipsters
2012 · album
Real Gone Kid
2006 · single
Singles
2006 · album
The Very Best Of
2001 · compilation
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Biography
Their first notes were shrouded in cloud, a collection of bittersweet songs on hurricane days in towns to be blamed, which grew to define a place and time. Now, over 30 years since their debut album Raintown, Deacon Blue return with a collection of silver linings. City of Love sees the multi-million selling band deliver eleven brilliant new tracks tethered by a singular belief - that even in the corners of a town or a life where no light falls, hope can prevail. The new songs have gradually formed in the three years since their last album Believers, a response to the plight of the millions of souls forced to flee their homes in the desperate hope of finding peace in countries elsewhere. After a decade of sporadic gigs and compilation releases, the band’s 2012 return The Hipsters, was their first studio LP of entirely new songs since 2001’s Homesick. It was no nostalgia project. These were tunes on which a band rediscovered themselves, and whose fans followed. The album’s critical success fuelled a creative resurgence which returned them not only to mainstream radio playlists, but also venues like London’s Royal Albert Hall, Liverpool Echo Arena and Glasgow SSE Hydro, befitting the stature of a chart-topping legacy boasting 7 million album sales, two number one albums and 14 hit singles.