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Cover art from Fish's albums, singles, and videos belong in this category. Media in category "Fish album covers" The following 17 files are in this category, out of 17 total.
Songs from the Mirror is the third solo album by Scottish singer-songwriter Fish, released in 1993 as his final album for Polydor.It does not contain any original material; instead it is a cover album featuring Fish's versions of songs by artists who inspired him before his career started.
13th Star is the ninth solo studio album (eighth of original material) by Fish since he left Marillion in 1988. Released as a limited edition via mail-order in September 2007 and to retail in February 2008, it is his first since Field of Crows (2004).
A Fish in the Lemon Tree: Released: 4 December 2020; Label: Chocolate Frog; Formats: digital download; Recorded on 13 March 2020 at the Lemon Tree, Aberdeen — — The Last Straw: Released: 4 February 2022; Label: Chocolate Frog; Formats: 2xCD+DVD, digital download; Recorded on 13 December 2018 at the O2 Academy Glasgow — 7
Sunsets on Empire is the fifth studio album by Fish (fourth of original material) since he left Marillion in 1988. It was released in 1997 and was mostly written together with Steven Wilson of Porcupine Tree, who co-composed six out of ten tracks on the original version, (plus one bonus track on the Japanese and remastered edition) and also produced the album.
Fellini Days is Fish's seventh solo studio album (sixth of original material) since leaving Marillion in 1988, his first since Raingods with Zippos (1999) and the first on his own label Chocolate Frog Records.
The album art depicts a painting by Jenny Saville. A number of UK supermarkets deemed the red/ochre colours on the portrait to be blood, and therefore used alternative packaging to stock the item. [128] The alternative packaging in question is a longbox, a type of outer packaging used for some CDs in the 1980s and early to mid-1990s.
Kettle of Fish was Fish's first release under a new contract with Roadrunner Records, who signed Fish after the financially catastrophic Sunsets on Empire album and tour of 1997 had forced him to dissolve his own label Dick Brothers Record Company. (The Dick Bros. logo still appears on the back, but this appears to be strictly symbolic.)